UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549



 

SCHEDULE 14A
 
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934



 
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Filed by a Party other than the Registrant o

Check the appropriate box:

o Preliminary Proxy Statement
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x Definitive Proxy Statement
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o Soliciting Material Pursuant to §240.14a-11(c) or §240.14a-12

MACQUARIE INFRASTRUCTURE COMPANY LLC

(Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

N/A

(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other than the Registrant)

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[GRAPHIC MISSING]

MACQUARIE INFRASTRUCTURE COMPANY LLC

April 2, 2015

Dear Shareholder:

You are cordially invited to participate in our 2015 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, referred to herein as the Annual Meeting, which will be held on Wednesday, May 20, 2015 at 10:00A.M. (Eastern Time). We are pleased that this year’s Annual Meeting will be a “virtual meeting” of shareholders, that is, you may participate solely “by means of remote communication”. You will be able to participate in the Annual Meeting, vote and submit your questions during the Annual Meeting via live webcast by visiting www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MIC15 or listen and submit your questions via conference call at 1-877-317-6789. Please note that you will not be able to vote your shares via conference call. Prior to the Annual Meeting, you will be able to vote at www.proxyvote.com.

The following pages contain the formal Notice of the Annual Meeting and our proxy statement. The proxy statement contains important information about the Annual Meeting, the proposals we will consider and how you can vote your LLC interests, or shares. Please review this material for information concerning the business to be conducted at the meeting and the nominees for election as directors.

Your vote is very important to us. Whether or not you plan to participate in the Annual Meeting, we encourage you to promptly vote and submit your proxy by telephone or by Internet or by completing, signing, dating and returning the enclosed proxy card. This will help us ensure that your vote is represented at the Annual Meeting.

On behalf of the board of directors and management, I extend our appreciation for your participation and interest in Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC.

Sincerely,

[GRAPHIC MISSING]

Martin Stanley
Chairman of the Board of Directors


 
 

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[GRAPHIC MISSING]

MACQUARIE INFRASTRUCTURE COMPANY LLC

April 2, 2015

NOTICE OF 2015 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

To Be Held on Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC’s 2015 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, referred to herein as the Annual Meeting, will be held on Wednesday, May 20, 2015 at 10:00A.M. (Eastern Time). You can participate in the Annual Meeting online, vote your shares electronically and submit questions during the Meeting, by visiting www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MIC15. Be sure to have your 16-Digit Control Number to enter the Annual Meeting. In addition, you may listen and submit your questions via conference call at 1-877-317-6789. Please note that you will not be able to vote your shares via conference call. At the Annual Meeting, we will discuss, and you will vote on, the following proposals:

the election of directors eligible for election by our shareholders to our board of directors to serve for a one-year term;
the ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP as our independent auditor for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2015;
the approval, on an advisory basis, of executive compensation; and
any other business as may be properly brought before the meeting.

These matters are more fully described in the enclosed proxy statement. The board of directors recommends that you vote FOR the election of directors, the ratification of the independent auditors and the approval, on an advisory basis, of executive compensation.

Only shareholders of record at the close of business on March 25, 2015 will be entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual Meeting and at any subsequent adjournments or postponements. Prior to the Annual Meeting, those shareholders will be able to vote at www.proxyvote.com. Each shareholder is entitled to one vote for each share held at the close of business on March 25, 2015.

The share register will not be closed between the record date and the date of the Annual Meeting. A list of shareholders entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting is available for inspection at our principal executive offices at 125 West 55th Street, New York, New York 10019, and electronically during the Annual Meeting at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MIC15 when you enter your 16-Digit Control Number.

You have three options for submitting your vote before the Annual Meeting:

Internet;
Phone; or
Mail.

We encourage you to vote promptly, even if you plan to participate in the Annual Meeting.

Important Notice Regarding the Internet Availability of Proxy Materials for the
Shareholder Meeting to be Held on May 20, 2015.
The proxy statement and our 2014 annual report are available on our web site at
www.macquarie.com/mic under “Investor Center/Reports and Presentations”.

By order of the board of directors,

[GRAPHIC MISSING]

Michael Kernan
General Counsel and Secretary


 
 

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MACQUARIE INFRASTRUCTURE COMPANY LLC
TABLE OF CONTENTS

 
  Page
Voting Instruction and Information     1  
Purpose of Meeting     1  
Internet, Conference Call and Electronic Availability of Proxy Materials     1  
Procedure for Participating and Voting at the Annual Meeting     2  
Voting by Proxy     2  
Revocation of Proxy     3  
Approval of Proposals and Solicitation     3  
Delivery of Documents to Shareholders Sharing an Address     5  
Proposal 1: Election of Directors     6  
Election of Directors     6  
Recommendation of the Board     7  
Proposal 2: Ratification of Selection of Independent Auditor     8  
General     8  
Fees     8  
Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures     9  
Recommendation of the Board     9  
Proposal 3: Approval, on an Advisory Basis, of Executive Compensation     10  
General     10  
Recommendation of the Board     10  
Governance Information     11  
Board Leadership Structure     11  
Our Board’s Role in Risk Oversight     12  
Compensation Risk Assessment     12  
Board Composition and Independence     12  
Certain Information Regarding Our Directors and Executive Officers     13  
Executive Officers     13  
Board Meetings and Committees; Annual Meeting Attendance     14  
Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation     15  
Director Retirement Policy     15  
Executive Sessions of Our Board     16  
Corporate Governance Guidelines and Code of Ethics and Conduct     16  
Minimum Shareholding Guidelines     16  
Nominations of Directors     16  
Shareholder Nominations of Directors     17  
Communication with Our Board     18  
Director Compensation Fiscal Year 2014     19  
Director Fees     19  
Independent Directors’ Equity Plan     20  
2014 Independent Directors’ Equity Plan (“2014 Plan”)     20  

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  Page
Compensation Discussion and Analysis     21  
General     21  
Objectives of Macquarie’s Compensation Program     21  
Responsibility for Macquarie’s Compensation Program     22  
2014 Say-on-Pay Advisory Vote     22  
Elements of Macquarie’s Compensation Program     23  
Post-Termination Compensation and Benefits     27  
Compensation Committee Report     28  
Executive Compensation     29  
Summary Compensation Table     29  
Grants of Plan Based Awards in Fiscal Year 2014     30  
Grants of Macquarie Restricted Share Units     30  
Retained Cash Portion of Profit Share     31  
Employment Agreements     31  
Outstanding Equity Awards at 2014 Fiscal Year-End     31  
Stock Vested in Fiscal Year 2014     32  
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation in Fiscal Year 2014     32  
Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control     33  
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management     35  
Audit Committee Report     37  
Certain Relationships and Related Party Transactions     38  
Related Party Transactions Policies     38  
Our Relationship With the Macquarie Group     38  
Contractual Arrangements With Our Manager     38  
Other Services from the Macquarie Group     41  
Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance     43  
Shareholder Proposals for the 2016 Annual Meeting of Shareholders     43  
United States Securities and Exchange Commission Reports     43  
Other Matters     44  

Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC is not an authorized deposit-taking institution for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959 (Commonwealth of Australia) and its obligations do not represent deposits or other liabilities of Macquarie Bank Limited ABN 46 008 583 542 (MBL). MBL does not guarantee or otherwise provide assurance in respect of the obligations of Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC.

Except where the context indicates otherwise, “Macquarie Infrastructure Company,” “MIC,” “we,” “us,” and “our” refer to Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC, or the Company. References to “shareholders” refer to holders of limited liability company interests, or shares, of Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC.

“Macquarie Group” or “Macquarie” refers to the Macquarie Group of companies, which comprises Macquarie Group Limited (MGL) and its worldwide subsidiaries and affiliates, including our Manager, Macquarie Infrastructure Management (USA) Inc.

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MACQUARIE INFRASTRUCTURE COMPANY LLC
125 West 55th Street
New York, New York 10019

PROXY STATEMENT
for Annual Meeting of Shareholders on May 20, 2015

VOTING INSTRUCTION AND INFORMATION

This Proxy Statement is furnished in connection with the solicitation of proxies by the board of directors of Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, for the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC to be held on Wednesday, May 20, 2015 at 10:00 A.M. (Eastern Time). You can participate in the Annual Meeting online, vote your shares electronically and submit questions during the Meeting and for any subsequent adjournments or postponements of the 2015 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, by visiting www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MIC15. Be sure to have your 16-Digit Control Number to access the Annual Meeting. In addition, you may listen and submit your questions via conference call at 1-877-317-6789. Please note that you will not be able to vote your shares via conference call. The notice of Annual Meeting, proxy statement and proxy are first being distributed to shareholders on or about April 10, 2015.

Purpose of Meeting

As described in more detail in this proxy statement, shareholders will vote on the following proposals at the Annual Meeting:

the election of directors eligible for election by our shareholders to our board of directors to serve for a one-year term that expires at our 2016 Annual Meeting (Proposal 1);
the ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP as our independent auditor for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2015 (Proposal 2);
the approval, on an advisory basis, of executive compensation (Proposal 3); and
any other business as may be properly brought before the meeting.

Internet, Conference Call and Electronic Availability of Proxy Materials

As permitted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, or the SEC, we are sending a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials, or the Notice, to shareholders who hold shares in “street name” through a bank, broker or other holder of record. The Notice includes instructions on how to access this proxy statement and our 2014 annual report over the Internet or to request a printed set of these materials at no charge. The Notice also provides instructions on how to access your proxy card to be able to vote through the Internet or by telephone.

We are either mailing or providing notice and electronic delivery of the proxy solicitation materials and our 2014 annual report at https://materials.proxyvote.com/55608B on or around April 10, 2015 to all shareholders entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting. Prior to the Annual Meeting, shareholders will be able to vote, as well as access these documents, at www.proxyvote.com. At the Annual Meeting, shareholders will be able to participate, vote, access these documents and submit questions, by visiting www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MIC15 or listen and submit your questions via conference call at 1-877-317-6789. Please note that you will not be able to vote your shares via conference call.

Any beneficial owner may request to receive proxy materials in printed form by mail or electronically by email on an ongoing basis. If you hold your shares through a bank, broker or another financial institution, please refer to the information provided by that entity for instructions on how to elect this option. Choosing to receive future proxy materials by email will save us the cost of printing and mailing documents and will reduce the impact of our annual meetings on the environment. An election to receive proxy materials by mail or email will remain in effect until terminated.

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Procedure for Participating and Voting at the Annual Meeting

The Company will be hosting the Annual Meeting live via the Internet. A summary of the information you need to participate in the Annual Meeting online is provided below:

any shareholder can participate in the Annual Meeting live via the Internet at www.macquarie.com/mic under “Investor Center/Reports and Presentations”;
the webcast starts at 10:00 A.M. (Eastern Time), but access to the Annual Meeting will be available 15 minutes prior to such time and we encourage you to login during that period;
shareholders may vote and submit questions while participating in the Annual Meeting on the Internet;
please have your 16-Digit Control Number to enter the Annual Meeting;
instructions on how to participate via the Internet, including how to demonstrate proof of share ownership, are posted at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MIC15; and
a webcast replay of the Annual Meeting will be available until December 31, 2014 at www.macquarie.com/mic under “Investor Center/Reports and Presentations”.

In addition, you may listen and submit your questions via conference call at 1-877-317-6789. Please note that you will not be able to vote your shares via conference call.

Voting by Proxy

In addition to voting at the Annual Meeting as described above, shareholders can vote by proxy in any of the following ways before the Annual Meeting:

By Internet.  You can use the Internet to transmit your voting instructions up until 11:59 P.M. (Eastern Time) the day before the Annual Meeting. Instructions for voting over the Internet can be found in the enclosed proxy card or the Notice.
By Telephone.  The number for telephone voting can be found on the enclosed proxy card or the Notice. Please have your 16-Digit Control Number to vote by telephone. Telephone voting is available 24 hours a day.
By Mail.  Complete, sign, date and return the proxy card supplied by your broker, bank or other financial institution through which you hold your shares.

WE MUST RECEIVE YOUR PROXY BY NO LATER THAN 11:59 P.M. (EASTERN TIME) ON MAY 19, 2015. IF WE DO NOT RECEIVE YOUR PROXY BY THAT TIME, YOUR PROXY WILL NOT BE VALID. IN THIS CASE, UNLESS YOU ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING LIVE VIA THE INTERNET, YOUR VOTE WILL NOT BE REPRESENTED.

The Internet and telephone voting procedures are designed to authenticate your identities, to allow you to give your voting instructions and to confirm that your instructions have been recorded properly. We have been advised that the Internet and telephone voting procedures that have been made available to you are consistent with the requirements of applicable law. When voting by Internet or telephone, you should understand that, while neither we nor any third party proxy service providers charge fees for voting by Internet or telephone, there may nevertheless be costs, such as usage charges from Internet access providers and telephone companies, which must be borne by you.

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Your proxy will be voted as you direct in your proxy. Proxies returned without voting directions, and without specifying a proxy to participate in the Annual Meeting and vote on your behalf, will be voted in accordance with the recommendations of our board. Our board recommends:

a vote FOR each of the five nominees for director to serve for a one-year term that expires at our 2016 Annual Meeting (Proposal 1);
a vote FOR the ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP as the Company’s independent auditor for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2015 (Proposal 2); and
a vote FOR the proposal to approve, on an advisory basis, of executive compensation (Proposal 3).

If any other matter properly comes before the Annual Meeting, your proxy will be voted on that matter by the proxy holders, in their discretion.

Revocation of Proxy

You may revoke or change your proxy before the Annual Meeting by:

subsequently executing and mailing a new proxy card that is received on a later date and no later than the deadline specified on the proxy card;
subsequently submitting a new proxy by Internet or telephone that is received by the deadline specified on the proxy card;
giving written notice of revocation to the attention of Michael Kernan, General Counsel and Secretary, Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC, 125 West 55th Street, New York, New York 10019, that is received no later than 11:59 P.M. (Eastern Time) on May 19, 2015; or
voting on the Internet at our Annual Meeting.

If you need an additional proxy card and are a record holder, contact Michael Kernan, our General Counsel and Secretary, at 212-231-1849; if you are a beneficial owner, contact your bank, broker or other financial institution through which you hold your shares.

Approval of Proposals and Solicitation

Each shareholder who owned shares on March 25, 2015, the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting, is entitled to one vote for each share. On March 25, 2015, we had 77,412,113 shares issued and outstanding that we believe were held by 200 holders of record representing approximately 65,000 beneficial holders.

Quorum

Under the third amended and restated operating agreement of the Company, which we refer to as the LLC agreement, the shareholders participating in person or by proxy holding a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to vote shall constitute a quorum at a meeting of shareholders of the Company. Holders of shares as of the record date are the only shareholders entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting. Shares represented by proxies that are marked “abstain” or that are represented by broker non-votes will be counted as present for purposes of determining the presence of a quorum. A broker non-vote occurs when the broker holding shares for a beneficial owner does not vote on a particular proposal because the broker does not have discretionary voting power to vote on that proposal without specific voting instructions from the beneficial owner. Proposal 2 described in this proxy is a “discretionary” item. Proposals 1 and 3 described in this proxy statement are “non-discretionary” items.

If the persons participating or represented by proxies at the Annual Meeting do not constitute a majority of the holders of outstanding shares entitled to vote as of the record date, we will adjourn or postpone the Annual Meeting to a later date.

Approval of Proposals

Election of Directors.  For the election of directors (Proposal 1), the affirmative vote of a plurality of the votes cast on such proposal is required. The LLC agreement provides that shareholders are entitled, at the Annual Meeting, to vote for the election of all of the directors other than the Chairman, and an alternate

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therefor appointed by our Manager. You may vote FOR any or all director nominees or you may WITHHOLD your vote as to one or more director nominees. Withholdings and broker non-votes will not be counted as votes cast.

Ratification of the Appointment of the Independent Auditor.  For the ratification of the independent auditor (Proposal 2), the affirmative vote of at least a majority of shares represented at the meeting in person or by proxy is required. You may vote FOR or AGAINST or you may ABSTAIN from the ratification of the independent auditor. An abstention will have the effect of a negative vote on this matter.

Approval, on an Advisory Basis, of Executive Compensation.  For the approval, on an advisory basis, of executive compensation (Proposal 3), the affirmative vote of at least a majority of shares represented at the meeting in person or by proxy is required. You may vote FOR or AGAINST or you may ABSTAIN from the advisory vote on executive compensation. An abstention will have the effect of a negative vote on this matter. A broker non-vote will not be counted as present for purposes of calculating the voting results on this matter.

Other Matters.  Any other proposal that properly comes before the Annual Meeting must be approved by the affirmative vote of at least a majority of the votes represented at the meeting in person or by proxy in order to pass.

All votes will be tabulated by Broadridge Financial Services, the proxy tabulator and inspector of election appointed for the Annual Meeting. Broadridge Financial Services will separately tabulate affirmative and negative votes, abstentions and broker non-votes.

Ensuring Your Vote Counts

Under rules of the New York Stock Exchange, or NYSE, if you are a beneficial owner and hold your shares in “street name,” you must give your bank, broker or other holder of record specific voting instructions for your shares by the deadline provided in order to ensure your shares are voted in the way you would like.

If you do not provide voting instructions to your bank, broker or other holder of record, whether your shares can be voted by such person depends on the type of item being considered for vote.

Non-Discretionary Items.  Proposal 1, the election of directors, and Proposal 3, the approval, on an advisory basis, of executive compensation, are “non-discretionary items” and may not be voted on by brokers, banks or other holders of record who have not received specific voting instructions from beneficial owners. If you do not provide specific voting instructions, your shares will be recorded as a broker non-vote and will not be counted as a vote cast or as present for purposes of calculating voting results.

Discretionary Items.  Proposal 2, the ratification of the appointment of the independent auditor, is a “discretionary item” and brokers, banks or other holders of record can vote your shares on the ratification of the independent auditor in their discretion unless they receive specific voting instructions from you.

Solicitation of Proxies

We will bear the cost of the solicitation of proxies, including the preparation, printing and mailing of this proxy statement and the proxy card. In addition to the solicitation of proxies by mail, solicitation may be made by certain employees of the Macquarie Group by telephone, telecopier or other means. These employees will receive no additional compensation for such solicitation. The Company will reimburse brokers and other nominees for costs incurred by them in mailing proxy materials to beneficial holders in accordance with the rules of the NYSE.

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Delivery of Documents to Shareholders Sharing an Address

If you are the beneficial owner, but not the record holder, of shares, the broker, bank or other financial institution through which you hold your shares may only deliver one copy of this proxy statement and our 2014 annual report to multiple shareholders who share an address unless that nominee has received contrary instructions from one or more of the shareholders. We will deliver promptly, upon written or oral request, to a shareholder at a shared address to which a single copy of the documents was delivered a copy of this proxy statement and our 2014 annual report. A shareholder who wishes to receive a separate copy of the proxy statement and annual report, now or in the future, should submit this request by writing to Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC, Attn: Investor Relations 125 West 55th Street, New York, NY 10019, or by calling 212-231-1825. If you are a beneficial owner and would like to receive a separate copy of this proxy statement and our 2014 annual report, please contact the broker, bank or other financial institution through which you hold your shares. Beneficial owners sharing an address who are receiving multiple copies of proxy materials and annual reports and who wish to receive a single copy of such materials in the future will also need to contact their broker, bank or other financial institution to request that only a single copy of each document be mailed to all shareholders at the shared address in the future.

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PROPOSAL 1:
ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

Election of Directors

Five directors are eligible to be elected by our shareholders at this Annual Meeting and will serve a term that expires at our 2016 Annual Meeting. Each of Messrs. Brown, Carmany, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone has been nominated for re-election.

The following biographies highlight the specific skills, qualifications and experience of the directors nominated for election, and support the nomination and governance committee’s determination that these individuals are particularly qualified to serve on our board. The five nominees for election at the Annual Meeting are as follows.

Norman H. Brown, Jr. has served as a director of the Company since December 2004. He currently serves as a Member and Senior Managing Director of Brock Capital Group LLC, which provides investment banking services for early stage and middle market companies, a position he has held since December 2003. Mr. Brown’s previous experience comprises over 30 years of experience in the investment banking business. During 2002 and 2003, Mr. Brown attended to private investments. From December 2000 to December 2001, he was Managing Director and Senior Advisor for Credit Suisse First Boston in the Global Industrial & Services Group with new business development responsibility for Latin America. During Mr. Brown’s 15 years at Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corporation, from June 1985 to December 2000, he was a member of the Mergers & Acquisitions Group, established and headed the Restructuring Group, and headed the Global Metals & Mining Group. Until December 2009, Mr. Brown was the lead independent director for W.P. Stewart & Co. Growth Fund, Inc.

Mr. Brown brings in-depth knowledge of financial markets and broad leadership experience to our board of directors, through his long tenure in the financial industry. His prior work and expertise in mergers and acquisitions and debt restructurings has allowed him to provide valuable advice on our past acquisitions and our efforts to strengthen our balance sheet. Mr. Brown’s experience as an independent director and lead director for other companies provides him with unique insight on corporate governance matters, which he has shared with the Company.

George W. Carmany, III has served as a director of the Company since December 2004. Since 1995, he has served as President of G.W. Carmany and Co., Inc., which advises developing companies in the life sciences and financial services industries. Mr. Carmany is a Senior Advisor to EnGeneIc Ltd., Essex Woodlands, and served in a similar capacity with Brown Brothers Harriman and Co. until 2014. In 2010, he retired as a director of SunLife Financial, Inc. He is a member of the advisory committee on education of the Harvard Medical School. From 1999 to 2001, he served as Chairman and Chief Executive of Helicon Therapeutics and continued to serve as Chairman of Helicon Therapeutics through August 2005. From 1996 to 1997, he also served as Chairman of the New England Medical Center Hospitals. Mr. Carmany’s previous experience includes over 20 years at the American Express Company, where he held senior positions in its international banking, corporate and asset management divisions, and nine years at Bankers Trust Company.

Mr. Carmany is an experienced executive, and he adds an important dimension to our board’s expertise through his considerable financial literacy and his work in advising developing companies. Mr. Carmany’s experience and background allows him to provide oversight and advice on financial reporting and accounting matters. As an advisor to developing companies, Mr. Carmany encounters and advises on a range of business, legal, risk management and financial issues. This experience has been valuable as our board has worked with our management team to address issues and manage risks arising out of the financial crisis and the slow economic recovery.

H.E. (Jack) Lentz has served as a director of the Company since August 2011. He also serves on the boards of Carbo Ceramics Inc. (since 2003), Peabody Energy Corporation (since 1998) and WPX Energy, Inc. (since 2012). He is a member of the audit committee and chair of the compensation committee of Carbo Ceramics Inc. and a member of the compensation committee of WPX Energy, Inc. From March 2009 until May 2011, Mr. Lentz was a Managing Director at Lazard Freres & Co. Between September 2008 and March 2009, he was a Managing Director at Barclay’s Capital. From 1993 until September 2008, he was a Managing Director at Lehman Brothers, where he headed the natural resources group (1993 – 1997) and was

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active in merchant banking. From 1988 to 1993, he was the Vice Chairman of Wasserstein Perella & Co. and head of its energy group. He started his career at Lehman Brothers in 1971.

Mr. Lentz is an experienced banker and board member with broad experience in the natural resources and energy industries, both of which are traditional infrastructure sectors. That experience allows him to inform our board on a wide range of governance, financial and operational issues, especially as they relate to the operations of our energy businesses, and the development of the Company’s strategic direction.

Ouma Sananikone has served as a director of the Company since February 2013. Ms. Sananikone currently serves as a non-executive director of the Caisse de Depot et Placement de Quebec in Canada (since 2007), as well as Icon Parking (since 2006) in the USA. She was also a non-executive director of Moto Hospitality Services (from 2006 to 2009) and Air Serv Holdings (from 2006 to 2013). She was previously Chairman of Smarte Carte from 2007 to 2010 and of EvolutionMedia from 2003 to 2005. She also acted as Australian Financial Services Fellow for the USA on behalf of Invest Australia from 2005 to 2008.

Ms. Sananikone served as director of State Super Corporation of NSW (Australia) from 2002 to 2005 and as a director of Babcock and Brown Direct Investment Fund (Australia) from 2002 to 2005. In addition, she was previously a Managing Director with responsibility for Corporate Strategy and Development at BT Financial Group, part of Westpac Banking Group from 2002 to 2003, and the Chief Executive Officer of Aberdeen Asset Management (Australia) Ltd, a division of Aberdeen Asset Management PLC from 2000 to 2001. From 1994 to 2000, Ms. Sananikone held senior positions at EquitiLink Group, which was later acquired by Aberdeen Asset Management PLC.

Ms. Sananikone is an experienced senior investment executive and board member with broad international experience in infrastructure industries and consortium arrangements. That experience allows her to inform our board on a wide range of governance, financial and operational issues, especially as they relate to the operations of our infrastructure businesses.

William H. Webb has served as a director of the Company since December 2004. He served as a member of the board of directors of Pernod Ricard S.A. from May 2003 until November 2009. Mr. Webb’s previous experience includes over 35 years in managing businesses of the Philip Morris group (now comprising Altria Group, Inc., Philip Morris International Inc. and Kraft Foods Inc. following the spin-off of Kraft Foods and Philip Morris International from the Altria Group) around the world. Mr. Webb was Chief Operating Officer for Philip Morris Companies Inc. in New York between May 1997 and August 2002. He also served as Vice Chairman of the board of directors of Philip Morris from August 2001 to August 2002. Mr. Webb has been a consultant to the Altria Group following his retirement from Philip Morris in August 2002, until October 2005.

Mr. Webb’s experience in senior management and on the boards of large public companies allows him to participate meaningfully in overseeing our Manager’s activities and in providing useful advice to our management team. His role as a director of other public companies allows him to inform our board as to corporate governance issues and trends and to act as an effective lead independent director for the Company. Mr. Webb uses his management experience to help our board and management fashion our business strategy, identify risks and oversee risk management and address key challenges, including a continuing focus on cost management.

Recommendation of the Board

Our board recommends that you vote FOR the election of each of Messrs. Brown, Carmany, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone to our board as directors for a term ending at our 2016 Annual Meeting. An affirmative vote of a plurality of the votes cast is required to elect each of Messrs. Brown, Carmany, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone.

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PROPOSAL 2:
RATIFICATION OF SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT AUDITOR

General

Our board has recommended and asks that you ratify the selection of KPMG LLP as our independent auditor for the Company for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2015. You would be so acting based on the recommendation of our audit committee.

KPMG LLP was engaged by us following our initial public offering in December 2004 to audit our annual financial statements for the 2004 fiscal year and was appointed by our audit committee and ratified by shareholders to audit our annual financial statements for each subsequent fiscal year. Based on its past performance during these audits, the audit committee of the board has selected KPMG LLP as our independent auditor to perform the audit of our financial statements and our internal control over financial reporting for 2015. KPMG LLP is a registered public accounting firm.

The affirmative vote of a majority of the shares represented at the meeting in person or by proxy is required to ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP. If you do not ratify the selection of KPMG LLP, our audit committee will reconsider its selection of KPMG LLP and may, but is not required to, make a new proposal for an independent auditor.

Representatives of KPMG LLP are expected to be present at the Annual Meeting, will have the opportunity to make a statement if they desire to do so and will be available to respond to questions.

Fees

The chart below sets forth the total amount paid or payable by us to KPMG LLP in connection with the audit of our consolidated financial statements for the years indicated below and the total amounts billed to us by KPMG LLP for other services performed in those years, breaking down these amounts by category of service:

   
  2014   2013
Audit Fees(1)   $ 3,048,850     $ 2,577,200  
Audit-Related Fees(2)     449,000       167,750  
Tax Fees            
All Other Fees(3)     307,000        
Total   $ 3,804,850     $ 2,744,950  

(1) “Audit Fees” are fees paid to KPMG LLP for professional services for the audit of our consolidated financial statements included in our annual reports on Form 10-K and the audit of our internal control over financial reporting, as well as the review of financial statements included in our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. The amount for 2014 and 2013 includes fees related to the audit and review of District Energy through August 21, 2014, the date of sale, of which we owned a 50.01% controlling interest prior to its sale. The amount for 2014 also includes fees for IMTT, our wholly-owned subsidiary, from July 16, 2014, the date when we acquired the remaining 50% interest in IMTT that we previously did not own (the “IMTT Acquisition”).
(2) “Audit-Related Fees” are fees billed by KPMG LLP for assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of our financial statements, including in connection with attestation reports on fees paid to our Manager and in connection with our operating businesses. “Audit-Related Fees” also includes comfort letters and consents in connection with equity and debt offerings. The amounts do not include fees related to the audit of IMTT prior to July 16, 2014, the date of the IMTT Acquisition.

“Audit-Related Fees” for IMTT were $431,000 for the year ended December 31, 2013. In addition, IMTT incurred an additional $55,000 in relation to documentation of controls and gap analysis for the year ended December 31, 2013. IMTT did not incur any audit-related fees from the period January 1, 2014 through July 16, 2014, the date of the IMTT Acquisition.

(3) “All Other Fees” relate to fees billed by KPMG LLP for the year ended December 31, 2014 related to due diligence services in connection with the IMTT Acquisition.

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Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures

The audit committee has established policies and procedures for its appraisal and approval of audit and non-audit services. The audit committee has the sole authority to pre-approve any audit and non-audit services to be provided by any registered public accounting firm. The audit committee has delegated to the chairman of the committee the authority to approve additional audit and non-audit services of KMPG LLP and any additional accounting firms. The delegation is limited to an aggregate of $50,000 in fees at any one time outstanding and not ratified by the audit committee, and confirmation of compliance with independence standards. The audit committee or its chairman has pre-approved all of the services provided by KPMG LLP since its engagement. All other audit-related, tax and other engagements may be approved by the audit committee prospectively.

In making its recommendation to ratify the selection of KPMG LLP as our independent auditor for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2015, the audit committee has considered whether the services provided by KPMG LLP are compatible with maintaining the independence of KPMG LLP and has determined that such services do not interfere with KPMG LLP’s independence.

Recommendation of the Board

Our board recommends that, based on the recommendation of the audit committee, you vote FOR the ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP to serve as the independent auditor for the Company for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2015.

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PROPOSAL 3:
APPROVAL, ON AN ADVISORY BASIS, OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

General

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, or the Dodd-Frank Act, enables our shareholders to vote to approve, on an advisory (nonbinding) basis, the compensation of our named executive officers. Accordingly, and pursuant to Section 14A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), our board has recommended and asks that you approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of our named executive officers, as described in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section and the compensation tables and related narrative disclosure on pages 21 – 34 of this proxy statement. Unless the board determines otherwise, the next such vote will be held at the Company’s 2016 Annual Meeting of shareholders.

This proposal, commonly known as a “say-on-pay” proposal, gives our shareholders the opportunity to express their views on our named executive officers’ compensation. This vote is not intended to address any specific item of compensation, but rather the overall compensation of our named executive officers.

As described in detail under the headings “Compensation Discussion and Analysis — General” and “Compensation Discussion and Analysis — Objectives of Macquarie’s Compensation Program,” the Company has a management services agreement with our Manager, a member of the Macquarie Group. Our Manager is responsible for the conduct of our Company’s day-to-day business and affairs and is entitled to receive base management fees and potentially performance fees for the provision of its services. The Macquarie employees who serve as our named executive officers have been seconded to us by our Manager on a full-time basis and we do not pay any compensation to them. Under our management services agreement, the services performed for the Company by our Manager are provided at our Manager’s expense, including all of the compensation of our named executive officers. The elements of the compensation program for our named executive officers derive from the general program established for employees of Macquarie. Macquarie’s approach is designed to drive shareholder returns over the short and long term, both for Macquarie shareholders as well as for shareholders of the entities managed by Macquarie, such as holders of our shares. Macquarie’s compensation program endeavors to drive shareholder returns while managing risk in a prudent fashion by focusing on two main objectives: aligning the interests of staff and shareholders and attracting and retaining high-quality staff.

At our 2014 Annual Meeting, shareholders expressed support for our named executive officer compensation, with approximately 94% of the votes approving, on an advisory basis, our executive compensation for fiscal 2013. We are asking our shareholders to indicate their support for our named executive officer compensation for fiscal 2014 as described on pages 21 – 34 of this proxy statement. This vote is advisory and, therefore, will not affect the existing compensation or be binding on our Company or our Manager. However, our Company values the opinions of our shareholders and will carefully consider, and will inform our Manager of, the outcome of this vote.

The following resolution is submitted for a shareholder vote at the Annual Meeting:

“RESOLVED, that the shareholders of the Company approve, on a non-binding advisory basis, the compensation of the Company’s named executive officers as disclosed in the proxy statement for the 2015 Annual Meeting pursuant to Item 402 of Regulation S-K, including the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section and the compensation tables and related narrative discussion set forth in such proxy statement.”

Recommendation of the Board

Our board recommends that you vote FOR the approval, on an advisory basis, of the compensation of our named executive officers as disclosed in this proxy statement.

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GOVERNANCE INFORMATION

Our board of directors, which we sometimes refer to as our board, is responsible for managing and directing the business and affairs of our Company. Our board of directors is responsible for establishing broad objectives and the general course of the business, determining basic policies, appraising the adequacy of our overall results, and generally representing and furthering the interests of our shareholders.

Board Leadership Structure

Our current board leadership structure is comprised of a chairman and an alternate chairman, each of whom is not a member of management but is appointed by our Manager, and a lead independent director in accordance with our corporate governance guidelines. Currently, William H. Webb serves as the lead independent director. Our lead independent director presides at executive sessions of our independent directors, which occur at least quarterly and more often as our independent directors deem appropriate. Each of our board committees is chaired by and wholly comprised of independent directors. We believe that this leadership structure is appropriate at this time given our externally-managed corporate structure and the benefits that this structure provides to our shareholders by combining our Manager’s knowledge of infrastructure businesses with independent oversight of our Manager’s activities.

Our board’s chairman and alternate chairman are appointed by our Manager pursuant to the management services agreement. The chairman presides over meetings of the board of directors and meetings of shareholders, prepares the agenda for meetings of our board of directors with input from our other directors and performs such other duties as may be assigned by our board of directors. Our alternate chairman is entitled to attend all meetings of the board and exercises the voting rights of our chairman and fulfills the duties of our chairman if he is absent. Because our chairman and alternate chairman are appointed by our Manager, but are not members of our management team, they are able to draw upon their extensive knowledge of infrastructure businesses and provide a strategic perspective on our business activities.

The following biographies highlight the qualifications and experience of Mr. Stanley, our chairman, and Ms. Wikramanayake, our alternate chairman.

Martin Stanley has served as chairman of the Company since July 2013, and prior to that served as alternate chairman of the Company since April 2011. Mr. Stanley is Global Head of the Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets division, which manages a significant global portfolio invested in sectors including airports, roads, rail, utilities, renewable energy, telecommunications, industrials, property and media. These assets are owned through a variety of listed and unlisted funds and co-investment vehicles. After joining Macquarie in 2004, Mr. Stanley was integral to the establishment of Macquarie’s first European infrastructure fund (MEIF 1) and directed the acquisition and management of investments for MIRA’s four European funds before being appointed Global Head in 2010. Mr. Stanley has directed significant transactions for MIRA including the acquisitions of UK Water Company Thames Water and the take private of German energy service provider Techem AG. He has also established successful new business lines in the UK, Korea, China, India, the Philippines, Mexico and Brazil. Prior to joining Macquarie, Mr. Stanley was a director at TXU Europe Group Plc, the energy services company whose operations included the generation, supply and trading of electricity and gas. Mr. Stanley has almost 30 years of experience in the utility sector having started his career in 1986 with Manweb Plc, the regulated asset owner and license holder for the power distribution network covering Merseyside, Cheshire and North Wales.

Mr. Stanley brings extensive knowledge of the infrastructure industry and its regulatory environment from his tenure in various leadership positions within the Macquarie Group. His understanding of the Group’s international operations and new business development makes him well-placed to provide strategic direction and industry insight to the Company. Mr. Stanley’s service on the investment committees of Macquarie Group managed vehicles affords him insight as to the valuation of infrastructure assets, their operations and key drivers in evaluating potential transactions.

Shemara Wikramanayake has served as alternate chairman since July 2013. Ms. Wikramanayake joined the Macquarie Group in 1987. She has been an Executive Director of the Macquarie Group since 1997. She currently heads Macquarie Asset Management, a position she has held since 2008 and is a member of Macquarie Group’s Executive Committee. Previously, Ms. Wikramanayake was head of the predecessor to the

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Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets division in New York from 2004 to 2008, and served as the Company’s alternate chairman from its original listing until 2007. Before that, she was the head of the Prudential Oversight team in the Investment Banking Group, a position she held since 2001. Prior to 2001, Ms. Wikramanayake spent 14 years in Macquarie Bank Limited’s Corporate Advisory team, where she advised on a range of transactions, including mergers and acquisitions, restructurings, valuations and public sector advice and privatizations, established and headed Macquarie Bank Limited’s Corporate Advisory office in New Zealand and helped develop Corporate Advisory operations in Asia based in Hong Kong and Malaysia.

Our Board’s Role in Risk Oversight

Our board of directors is responsible for overseeing our Company’s risk management. It discharges this responsibility directly and through its committees.

Our board of directors and its committees regularly review material enterprise, strategic, operational, legal and compliance risks with senior management of the Company and our Manager. Our board of directors is responsible for endorsing the Company’s risk management framework, including key policies and procedures and approval of any changes to the framework or any key risk policies and procedures; monitoring compliance with the risk management framework and delegating authority to management, where appropriate. On a regular basis, the board is presented with risk and compliance reports from management and compliance personnel directly responsible for the identification, evaluation and monitoring of risks within the business.

As part of the monitoring process, the board or the appropriate committee is provided with the following information at scheduled board meetings: any proposed changes to the risk management framework; key policies and procedures or reporting arrangement for its approval; reports on exposures, non-compliance with key policies and general effectiveness of risk management system, as appropriate; results of independent reviews or audits of the control environment; and the relevant management information. While our board oversees risk management, the Company’s management is responsible for managing risk.

Our board of directors has delegated responsibility for the oversight of certain specific risks to the audit committee. The audit committee is responsible for an annual review of our Company’s policies with respect to risk assessment and risk management. The audit committee has primary responsibility for overseeing risk policies and processes relating to the financial statements and financial reporting, as well as overseeing management of our legal and regulatory risks and our compliance with applicable laws and regulations. Our audit committee is primarily responsible for assessing the adequacy of our internal control framework, including accounting and operational risk management controls based on information provided or obtained from management. Our audit committee is responsible for reviewing and monitoring our code of ethics and conduct to guard against significant conflicts of interest and dishonest, unethical or illegal activities. The audit committee periodically reviews the performance of the Company’s accounting and financial personnel and reviews material litigation and regulatory proceedings and other matters relating to potentially significant corporate liability with the Company’s general counsel.

Compensation Risk Assessment

The Company’s compensation committee does not have responsibility for reviewing the compensation of the Company’s executives, who are compensated by the Company’s Manager operating under the management services agreement. The compensation committee nonetheless believes that the Manager’s compensation policies and practices with respect to the Company’s executives do not encourage excessive risk-taking and are not reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company. In reaching this conclusion, the committee considered that the elements of compensation are balanced among current cash payments, deferred cash and equity awards, the time vesting requirements of the Macquarie profit share program, which help align the executives’ interests with those of long-term shareholders, the fact that compensation is based on financial performance and other measures including leadership and upholding Macquarie’s values, and the oversight by the board of directors of the executives’ actions.

Board Composition and Independence

Our board of directors consists of six directors, five of whom were elected by shareholders of the Company at the last Annual Meeting. The remaining director, our chairman, currently Martin Stanley, is appointed by our Manager under the terms of our management services agreement. Shemara Wikramanayake

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was appointed as an alternate chairman by our Manager under the terms of the management services agreement effective July 2013. Except for Mr. Stanley and Ms. Wikramanayake, all directors’ terms expire at the Annual Meeting.

The board is composed of a majority of independent directors. In accordance with the listing standards of the NYSE, to be considered independent, the board must affirmatively determine that a director has no material relationship with the Company, either directly or as a partner, shareholder or officer of an organization that has a relationship with the Company, and that the director meets other NYSE independence standards. Mr. Webb maintains a private banking relationship with Macquarie Bank Limited, or MBL, an affiliate of our Manager, in an amount that is immaterial to MBL. The board has determined that this relationship is immaterial to a determination of director independence. Ms. Sananikone currently serves as a non-executive director of Icon Parking and she was previously Chairman of Smarte Carte and a non-executive director of Moto Hospitality Services and Air-Serv Holdings, which are companies that are or were owned by investor consortiums but managed by affiliates of the Manager of the Company. In each case Ms. Sananikone was the appointee of non-Macquarie investors of the consortium investment vehicle. The board has determined that these relationships are immaterial to a determination of independence. As a result, the board has determined that Messrs. Brown, Carmany, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone are independent under NYSE standards and Mr. Stanley and Ms. Wikramanayake, as Mr. Stanley’s alternate, are not independent under the NYSE standards.

Certain Information Regarding Our Directors and Executive Officers

The name and age of each director, including the alternate chairman, and each executive officer and the positions held by each of them as of March 31, 2015 are as follows:

     
Director   Age   Serving as Officer,
Director or Alternate Since
  Position
Martin Stanley   51   July 2013   Chairman/Director
Norman H. Brown, Jr.   68   December 2004   Director
George W. Carmany, III   75   December 2004   Director
H.E. (Jack) Lentz   70   August 2011   Director
Ouma Sananikone   57   February 2013   Director
William H. Webb   75   December 2004   Director
Shemara Wikramanayake   53   July 2013   Alternate Chairman
James Hooke   44   May 2009   Chief Executive Officer
Todd Weintraub   51   November 2008   Chief Financial Officer

Executive Officers

James Hooke was appointed chief executive officer of the Company in May 2009. Mr. Hooke is seconded to the Company as chief executive officer by our Manager under the terms of our management services agreement. He joined the Macquarie Group in 2007 as a division director in the Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets unit of Macquarie Asset Management. Macquarie Asset Management is an operating division of the Macquarie Group. Effective July 1, 2010, Mr. Hooke was promoted to executive director.

Prior to becoming chief executive officer of the Company, Mr. Hooke was responsible for the management of a portfolio company investment for Macquarie Infrastructure Partners Inc., the manager of two unlisted infrastructure funds responsible for investing and managing approximately $5.5 billion of investor commitments across a range of North American infrastructure businesses. Mr. Hooke was also responsible for the management of several portfolio company investments for other Macquarie affiliates and clients. Prior to joining Macquarie and since 2001, Mr. Hooke served in various senior management positions with Fairfax Media Limited, a newspaper publisher in Australia and New Zealand.

Todd Weintraub was appointed chief financial officer of the Company in November 2008. He joined the Macquarie Group in May 2005 serving as Vice President of Finance for the Company, reporting to the chief financial officer. Prior to Mr. Weintraub’s being appointed to chief financial officer of the Company, he served

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as the Company’s principal accounting officer from September of 2006. Effective July 1, 2010, Mr. Weintraub was promoted to division director of Macquarie Financial Management Group.

Before joining Macquarie, Mr. Weintraub served as Director of Accounting at Pathmark Foods from February 2004 to May 2005 and from January 2000 to December 2002 as the Chief Financial Officer of United Natural Foods, Inc.

Board Meetings and Committees; Annual Meeting Attendance

Our board met ten times in total in 2014. All directors attended at least 95% of the combined board and committee meetings on which they served in 2014. In addition, it is the policy of our board that our directors are expected to use reasonable efforts to attend the Annual Meeting of Shareholders. All of our directors then in office participated in our 2014 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, except for one independent director.

The LLC agreement gives our board the authority to delegate its powers to committees appointed by the board. All of our committees are composed solely of independent directors. Our committees are required to conduct meetings and take action in accordance with the directions of the board, the provisions of our LLC agreement and the terms of the respective committee charters. We have three standing committees: the audit committee, the compensation committee and the nominating and corporate governance committee. Copies of all committee charters, are available on our website at www.macquarie.com/mic under “Investor Center/Governance,” and in print from us without charge upon request by writing to Investor Relations at our principal executive offices at 125 West 55th Street, New York, New York 10019. The information on our website is not, and shall not be deemed to be, incorporated by reference into this proxy statement or incorporated into any other filings that the Company makes with the SEC.

Audit Committee.  The audit committee is composed of Messrs. Brown (Chair), Carmany, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone. The board has determined that each member of the audit committee meets the independence requirements of the NYSE and Rule 10A-3 of the Exchange Act. The board has also determined that Messrs. Brown and Carmany qualify as audit committee financial experts as defined by the SEC. The audit committee met six times during 2014. The audit committee is responsible for, among other things:

retaining and overseeing our independent accountants;
assisting the Company’s board of directors in its oversight of the integrity of our financial statements, the qualifications, independence and performance of our independent auditors and our compliance with legal and regulatory requirements;
reviewing and approving the plan and scope of the internal and external audit;
pre-approving any audit and non-audit services provided by our independent auditors;
approving the fees to be paid to our independent auditors;
reviewing with our chief executive officer and chief financial officer and independent auditors the adequacy and effectiveness of our internal controls;
preparing the audit committee report to be filed with the SEC;
reviewing and assessing annually the audit committee’s performance and the adequacy of its charter;
reviewing financial disclosure documents;
reviewing and approving related party transactions;
overseeing compliance with our code of ethics and conduct by our officers and directors;
reviewing the legal and regulatory compliance function; and
serving as a qualified legal compliance committee.

Compensation Committee.  The compensation committee is composed of Messrs. Webb (Chair), Brown, Carmany and Lentz and Ms. Sananikone. The board has determined that each member of the compensation committee meets the independence requirements of the NYSE. In addition, each committee member is an “outside director” as defined in Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and is a

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“non-employee director” within the meaning of Section 16 of the Exchange Act. The compensation committee met two times during 2014. The responsibilities of the compensation committee include:

reviewing our Manager’s performance of its obligations under the management services agreement;
reviewing the remuneration of our Manager;
determining the compensation of our independent directors; and
granting rights to indemnification and reimbursement of expenses to the Manager and any seconded individuals.

As described in “Compensation, Discussion and Analysis,” our chief executive officer and chief financial officer are seconded to us by our Manager and our Manager compensates these officers.

Our compensation committee may delegate any of its authority and duties described above to subcommittees or individual members of the committee, as it deems appropriate and in accordance with applicable laws and regulations. Additionally, our board of directors has adopted a policy pursuant to which it has delegated authority to make decisions relating to compensation plans and agreements (other than long-term incentive compensation or equity plans) to members of the Company’s senior management, or where appropriate, to the boards of directors of our individual businesses. This delegation of authority applies with respect to employees of our operating businesses, who are not members of the Company’s senior management.

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee.  The nominating and corporate governance committee is composed of Messrs. Carmany (Chair), Brown, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone. The board has determined that each member of the nominating and corporate governance committee meets the independence requirements of the NYSE. The nominating and corporate governance committee met once during 2014. The nominating and corporate governance committee is responsible for, among other things:

recommending the number of directors to comprise the board of directors;
identifying and evaluating individuals qualified to become members of the board of directors, other than our Manager’s appointed director and his alternate, and soliciting recommendations for director nominees from the chairman and chief executive officer of the Company;
recommending to the board the director nominees for each annual shareholders’ meeting, other than our Manager’s appointed director and his alternate;
recommending to the board of directors the candidates for filling vacancies that may occur between annual shareholders’ meetings, other than our Manager’s appointed director and his alternate;
reviewing board processes, self-evaluations and policies;
making recommendations to the board on matters of corporate governance, including changes to the corporate governance guidelines; and
monitoring developments in the law and practice of corporate governance.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

Messrs. Brown, Carmany, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone are members of our compensation committee. None of the members of our compensation committee is, or has been, an employee of the Company. During 2014, no member of our compensation committee had any relationship with the Company requiring disclosure under Item 404 of Regulation S-K. None of the Company’s executive officers or members of the Company’s board of directors has served as a member of a compensation committee (or if no committee performs that function, the board of directors) of any other entity that has an executive officer serving as a member of the Company’s board of directors or compensation committee.

Director Retirement Policy

The board amended its retirement policy in April 2015. The board will not nominate for re-election any non-management or non-Manager appointed director if the director will have completed 15 years of service as a member of the board on or prior to the date of the election as to which the nomination relates.

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Executive Sessions of Our Board

Our corporate governance guidelines provide that the non-management directors will meet without management directors at regularly scheduled executive sessions at least quarterly and at such other times as they deem appropriate. To the extent that any non-management directors are not independent, the independent directors will meet in regularly scheduled executive sessions at least once annually. In accordance with our corporate governance guidelines, the lead independent director, or alternatively, the chairman of the audit committee, nominating and corporate governance committee or compensation committee, will preside at these executive sessions of the non-management directors as determined by the non-executive directors based upon the subject matter to be discussed. Mr. Webb presided, and continues to preside, over these sessions.

Corporate Governance Guidelines and Code of Ethics and Conduct

Our board has adopted corporate governance guidelines that set forth our corporate governance objectives and policies and govern the functioning of the board. We also have a code of ethics and conduct that sets forth our commitment to ethical business practices. Our code of ethics and conduct applies to our directors, officers and employees, including our chief executive officer and chief financial officer, and also applies to our Manager, its employees and any affiliates of our Manager that perform management services for us pursuant to the management services agreement.

Our corporate governance guidelines and our code of ethics and conduct are available on our website at www.macquarie.com/mic under “Investor Center/Governance” and in print from us without charge upon request by writing to Investor Relations at Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC, 125 West 55th Street, New York, New York 10019.

Minimum Shareholding Guidelines

Our board, upon the recommendation of our nominating and corporate governance committee, has adopted stock ownership guidelines to align the interests of our non-management directors with the interests of our shareholders. Non-management directors are required to hold shares with a value equal to $300,000, based on the closing price of the shares on the NYSE on the later of the date of adoption of the policy and the date such director is first elected or appointed to the board. Non-management directors have up to five years from the date of his or her election or appointment to meet these requirements provided that shares with a value of at least $50,000 should be owned within the first year. Our non-management directors are each in compliance with this policy.

Nominations of Directors

As provided in its charter, the nominating and corporate governance committee will identify and recommend to the board nominees for election or re-election to the board. The committee will review candidates for the board recommended by the Company’s management and other members of the board who are not members of the committee, as well as candidates recommended by shareholders, in accordance with the following criteria and as discussed in “Shareholder Nominations of Directors” below.

The nominating and corporate governance committee, in making its recommendations, may consider some or all of the following factors, among others:

developments in the law and practice of corporate governance;
the candidate’s judgment, skill, diversity and experience with other organizations of comparable purpose, complexity and size, and subject to similar legal restrictions and oversight;
the relationship of the candidate’s experience to the experience of other board members;
the extent to which the candidate would be a valuable addition to the board and any committees thereof;
whether or not the person has any relationships that might impair his or her independence, including any business, financial or family relationships with the Manager or the Company’s management; and

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the candidate’s ability to contribute to the effective management of the Company, taking into account the needs of the Company and such factors as the individual’s experience, perspective, skills, and knowledge of the industry in which the Company operates.

Our nominating and corporate governance committee aims to achieve a board of directors that, as a whole, provides effective oversight of the management and business of our Company. Therefore, the committee believes that our directors should represent an appropriate diversity of experience, expertise, skills, specialized knowledge and other qualifications and attributes that provide for a variety of viewpoints. We believe that a director nominee should not be chosen or excluded solely or largely because of race, ethnicity, gender, age, national origin, or sexual orientation or identity.

In recommending candidates for election as directors, the nominating and corporate governance committee will also take into consideration the need for the board of directors to have a majority of directors that are independent under the requirements of the NYSE and other applicable laws, and at least four directors that are independent under these requirements.

In addition, the nominating and corporate governance committee will recommend candidates for election as directors based on the following criteria and qualifications:

Financial Literacy.  Such person should be “financially literate” as such qualification is interpreted by the board of directors in its business judgment.
Leadership Experience.  Such person should possess significant leadership experience, such as experience in business, finance/accounting, law, education or government, and shall possess qualities reflecting a proven record of accomplishment and ability to work with others.
Commitment to Our Company’s Values.  Such person shall be committed to promoting our financial success and preserving and enhancing our reputation as a leader in the infrastructure sector, and shall be in agreement with our values as embodied in our code of ethics and conduct.
Absence of Conflicting Commitments.  Such person should not have commitments that would conflict with the time commitments of a director of our Company.
Complementary Attributes.  Such person shall have skills and talents which would be a valuable addition to the board and any committees thereof and that shall complement the skills and talents of our existing directors.
Reputation and Integrity.  Such person shall be of high repute and integrity.

Under the corporate governance guidelines, directors must inform the chairman of the board and the chairman of the nominating and corporate governance committee in advance of accepting an invitation to serve on another public company board or any committee thereof. In addition, no director may sit on the board, or beneficially own more than 5% equity interest in (other than through mutual funds or similar non-discretionary, undirected arrangements) any competitor of the Company in our principal lines of business.

Shareholder Nominations of Directors

To make a director nomination, a shareholder must give written notice to our Secretary at our principal executive office at 125 West 55th Street, New York, New York 10019. To be considered for inclusion in our proxy statement for the 2016 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, shareholder nominations must be received by the Company no later than January 21, 2016 and no earlier than December 22, 2015.

When directors are to be elected at a special meeting, such notice must be given not earlier than the 120th day prior to such special meeting and not later than the close of business on the later of the 90th day prior to such special meeting or the 10th day following the day on which a public announcement is first made of the date of the special meeting and of the nominees proposed by the board to be elected at such meeting.

In addition to any other requirements, for a shareholder to properly bring a nomination for director before either an annual or special meeting, the shareholder must be a shareholder of record on both the date of the shareholder’s notice of nomination and the record date relating to the meeting.

The shareholder submitting the recommendation must submit:

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the shareholder’s name and address as they appear on the share register of the Company, as well as the name and address of the beneficial owner, if any, on whose behalf the nomination is made;
the number of shares which are owned beneficially and of record by such shareholder and such beneficial owner, if any; and
a description of all arrangements or understandings between the shareholder and each nominee and any other person or persons pursuant to which the recommendation is being made by the shareholder.

In addition, any such notice from a shareholder recommending a director nominee must include the following information:

the candidate’s name, age, business address and residence address;
the candidate’s principal occupation or employment;
the number of shares that are beneficially owned by the candidate;
a copy of the candidate’s resume;
a written consent from the candidate to being named in the proxy statement as a nominee and to serving as director, if elected; and
any other information relating to such candidate that would be required to be disclosed in solicitations of proxies for election of directors under the federal securities laws, including Regulation 14A of the Exchange Act.

We may require any proposed nominee to furnish any additional information that we reasonably require to enable our nominating and corporate governance committee to determine the eligibility of the proposed nominee to serve as a director. Candidates are evaluated based on the standards, guidelines and criteria discussed above as well as other factors contained in the nominating and corporate governance committee’s charter, our corporate governance guidelines, other of our policies and guidelines and the current needs of the board.

Communications with Our Board

Communications to our board, any director individually or our lead independent director may be made by writing to the following address:

Attention: [Board of Directors] [Board Member] [Lead Independent Director]
c/o Michael Kernan, General Counsel and Secretary
125 West 55th Street
New York, NY 10019
United States of America

Communications sent to the physical mailing address are forwarded to the relevant director, if addressed to an individual director or the lead independent director, or to the chairman of our board if addressed to the board.

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DIRECTOR COMPENSATION FISCAL YEAR 2014

The following table sets forth the compensation payable by us to our directors eligible for election by our shareholders for service during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2014. We do not compensate our chairman or our alternate chairman for their services on our board of directors.

     
Name   Fees Earned
or Paid in
Cash
($)
  Stock
Awards
($)(1)
  Total
($)
Norman H. Brown, Jr.(2)     70,000       150,701       220,701  
George W. Carmany, III(2)     67,668       150,701       218,369  
H.E. (Jack) Lentz(2)     64,332       150,701       215,033  
Ouma Sananikone(2)     63,500       150,701       214,201  
William H. Webb(2)     64,000       150,701       214,701  

(1) Represents the grant date fair value of stock awards computed in accordance with ASC 718 Compensation — Stock Compensation, based on the closing price of shares on May 21, 2014, the date of grant, under the Independent Directors Equity Plan which expired on December 15, 2014.
(2) Stock awards are calculated in accordance with ASC 505-50 Equity — Equity Based Payments to Non-Employees and ASC 718. On May 21, 2014, Messrs. Brown, Carmany, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone were each granted 2,505 director share units, resulting in an aggregate grant of 12,525 director share units. These director share units, which equal $150,000 per director divided by the average closing price for the ten days preceding the grant date, being $59.89 per director share unit, vest on the day immediately preceding our 2015 Annual Meeting of shareholders. Upon vesting of the director share units, each director has the right to receive 2,505 shares, which had a market value of $178,080 based on the per share closing price on the NYSE of our shares on December 31, 2014. The above are the only equity grants by the Company to directors that were outstanding at December 31, 2014.

Director Fees

Our directors eligible for election by our shareholders each receive annual cash retainers of $50,000 for service on the board, payable in equal quarterly installments, as well as cash compensation for attendance at committee meetings and an annual retainer for service as committee chairman. Directors (including the chairman and the alternate chairman appointed by our Manager) are reimbursed for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred in attending meetings of the board of directors or committees and for any expenses reasonably incurred in their capacity as directors and alternate chairman, respectively. The Company also reimburses directors for all reasonable and authorized business expenses in accordance with the policies of the Company as in effect from time to time.

The Independent Directors Equity Plan, which expired on December 15, 2014, governed awards granted to the independent directors in 2014 and provided for automatic, non-discretionary awards of director share units as an additional fee for the independent directors’ services on the board. The 2014 Independent Directors Equity Plan (“2014 Plan”) is the successor to the Independent Directors Equity Plan. Under the 2014 Plan, there is no formula to determine the size of awards and the Compensation Committee will, subject to the provisions of the plan, including the limits on the number of shares that may be granted annually, have the authority to determine the size of all awards and terms and conditions thereof. The 2014 Plan will govern awards granted to the independent directors in 2015. See “2014 Independent Directors’ Equity Plan” below.

Messrs. Brown, Carmany and Webb have been directors since the closing of our initial public offering in December 2004, Mr. Lentz was appointed as a director effective August 12, 2011 and Ms. Sananikone was appointed as a director effective February 21, 2013. Each member of the Company’s various standing committees also receives the following compensation related to service on these committees:

for attending a committee meeting in person (if any): $3,000 for each meeting of the audit committee; $2,000 for each meeting of the nominating and corporate governance committee; and $2,000 for each meeting of the compensation committee; and

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for attending a telephonic committee meeting (if any): $1,500 for each meeting of the audit committee; $1,000 for each meeting of the nominating and corporate governance committee; and $1,000 for each meeting of the compensation committee.

The chairperson of the audit committee, nominating and corporate governance committee and compensation committee also receive an annual cash retainer, payable in equal quarterly installments, of $5,000, $2,000 and $2,000, respectively.

Independent Directors’ Equity Plan

The Independent Directors Equity Plan expired on December 15, 2014. On May 21, 2014, Messrs. Brown, Carmany, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone each were granted 2,505 director restricted share units under this plan. These share units will vest on the day immediately preceding the 2015 Annual Meeting.

2014 Independent Directors’ Equity Plan (“2014 Plan”)

The 2014 Plan is the successor to the Independent Directors Equity Plan. The only type of award that may be granted under the 2014 Plan is an award of director share units. A director share unit is an unsecured promise to transfer one share of the Company in the future on the settlement date, subject to satisfaction of the terms and conditions under the 2014 Plan and the applicable award agreement. The 2015 annual awards to our independent directors, to be granted on the date of this year’s Annual Meeting, and future awards will be granted under the 2014 Plan. Each independent director nominee will be eligible to receive, upon election at the 2015 Annual Meeting, a grant of director share units.

Under the 2014 Plan, there is no formula to determine the size of awards and the Compensation Committee has the authority to determine the size of all awards and terms and conditions thereof, subject to the provisions of the 2014 Plan, including the limits on the number of share units that may be granted annually and in the aggregate. Generally, share units granted at each Annual Meeting of shareholders will vest (assuming continued service of the director) on the day immediately preceding the next Annual Meeting of shareholders held following the date of grant. The maximum number of shares available for issuance under the 2014 Plan is 300,000 shares. The aggregate grant date fair value of awards granted to an independent director during any single fiscal year (excluding awards made at the election of the independent director in lieu of all or a portion of annual and committee cash retainers) may not exceed $350,000.

Only independent directors may participate in the 2014 Plan. Five of our directors, Messrs. Brown, Carmany, Lentz and Webb and Ms. Sananikone, are eligible to participate in the 2014 Plan. The 2014 Plan provides for awards of director share units as an additional fee for the independent directors’ services on the board. The purpose of this 2014 Plan is to promote the long-term growth and financial success of the Company by attracting, motivating and retaining independent directors of outstanding ability. The 2014 Plan is to be administered by the Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee has the authority to adopt rules and regulations that is considers necessary or appropriate to carry out the purposes of the 2014 Plan and to interpret the 2014 Plan. The Compensation Committee may also delegate some or all of its authority under the 2014 Plan to a subcommittee, another committee of the board of directors or an officer of the Company.

If a director’s service on the board terminates by reason of death or disability or in the event of a business combination (as defined in the Company’s LLC agreement) of the Company during the director’s service, the director share units will vest immediately.

We credit director share units to a bookkeeping account. No interest or dividends accrue or are credited to any director share units or the director’s account. As soon as practical following vesting, we will settle director share units by delivering to the director the equivalent whole number of shares. Share units cannot be settled in cash or any other kind of consideration. Prior to settlement, directors do not have the rights of a shareholder in any share corresponding to the director share units.

The 2014 Plan will expire on May 21, 2024, which is the tenth anniversary of the date on which the 2014 Plan was approved by shareholders. The board of directors may amend or terminate the 2014 Plan at any time. However, the board of directors may not amend the 2014 Plan without a director’s consent if the amendment would materially and adversely affect the director’s rights to previously granted awards.

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COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

General

Our Company has a management services agreement with our Manager, a member of the Macquarie Group. The management services agreement defines our Manager’s duties and responsibilities and is subject to the oversight and supervision of our Company’s board of directors. Our Manager is responsible for the conduct of our Company’s day-to-day business and affairs and is entitled to receive base management and potentially performance fees for the provision of its services. These fees are set forth below under “Certain Relationships and Related Party Transactions.” The Macquarie employees who serve as our chief executive officer and our chief financial officer have been assigned, or seconded, to us by our Manager and they have a fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of our Company. While our named executive officers derive profit share allocations from Macquarie, there is a strong alignment of interest between these employees and our shareholders for the following reasons:

Our Company pays management and potentially performance fees to Macquarie in accordance with the management services agreement. Management fees are linked to the market capitalization of our Company and performance fees can be paid based on the ongoing out-performance of our Company relative to a utilities benchmark.
Macquarie holds a significant interest in our Company and from time to time has reinvested its fees in our Company’s shares. At March 31, 2015, Macquarie had a 6.3% interest in our Company.
The staff of Macquarie Group understand that the relationship with Macquarie-managed entities is a long-term and recurring one and important to Macquarie’s welfare as a whole. They take a long-term approach to adding value in connection with the managed entities rather than solely focusing on the fees that would result from any one transaction.
The compensation system adopted by Macquarie, discussed in detail below, links the compensation of our named executive officers to our performance.

We do not pay any compensation to our named executive officers. Instead, we pay our Manager the base management fees and potentially performance fees discussed above. The Company does not have any employees. James Hooke, our chief executive officer and a Macquarie executive director, and Todd Weintraub, our chief financial officer and a Macquarie division director, are employed by Macquarie and are seconded to us on a full-time basis. Under our management services agreement, the services performed for the Company by our Manager are provided at its expense, including all of the compensation of our seconded executive officers. Messrs. Hooke and Weintraub are our only named executive officers.

James Hooke was appointed as our chief executive officer effective May 9, 2009, but joined Macquarie effective September 17, 2007. Todd Weintraub has served as our chief financial officer since November 25, 2008. The purpose of this compensation discussion and analysis is to provide our investors with information about the components of the compensation paid to our named executive officers by Macquarie, and the policies and objectives served by Macquarie’s compensation program.

Objectives of Macquarie’s Compensation Program

The elements of the compensation program for our named executive officers are derived from the general program established for employees of Macquarie. Macquarie’s approach to compensation is designed to drive shareholder returns over the long term, both for Macquarie shareholders as well as for shareholders of the entities managed by Macquarie including holders of our shares. Macquarie’s compensation program endeavors to drive shareholder returns while managing risk in a prudent fashion by focusing on two main objectives. The first objective is to attract and retain high-quality staff. The second objective is to align the interests of staff and shareholders by motivating staff through its compensation policies to increase Macquarie’s net profit after tax and sustain a high relative return on capital while managing risk. Growing net profit after tax and sustaining a high return on capital are fundamental drivers of total shareholder returns for Macquarie shareholders. These twin objectives encourage executives to expand existing businesses and establish promising new activities.

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Fees derived from entities managed by Macquarie represent part of Macquarie’s net profit after tax. Management fees earned by Macquarie under our management services agreement are based on the market capitalization of our Company and performance fees are based on ongoing out-performance over a utilities benchmark. To the extent our Company’s performance drives an increase in Macquarie’s net profit after tax, the interests of Macquarie and our named executive officers are aligned with those of our shareholders.

Macquarie also endeavors to attract high-quality executives and to retain them by offering a competitive performance-driven compensation package that encourages long-term commitment to Macquarie and Macquarie-managed entities and to superior performance. We believe that our ongoing performance is critically dependent on the skill, experience and caliber of Macquarie’s team of experienced executives, such as our named executive officers, for whose services Macquarie must compete in the world’s major financial centers.

The following principles in Macquarie’s compensation approach assist with the objective of driving shareholder returns by aligning the interests of staff and shareholders and by attracting and retaining high-quality staff:

Emphasizing a performance-based compensation approach that balances return and risk over the short and longer-term;
Employing the twin drivers of profitability and returns in excess of the cost of capital to motivate staff to improve shareholder returns;
Structuring compensation to manage risk in ways that align the interests of staff and shareholders;
Providing consistent arrangements over time to give staff the confidence to pursue multi-year initiatives; and
Ensuring compensation arrangements are relative to global peers so that staff are attracted to and stay with Macquarie.

Responsibility for Macquarie’s Compensation Program

The board of directors of Macquarie, or the Macquarie board, has a Board Remuneration Committee, or the BRC, whose objective is to assist the Macquarie board with Macquarie’s compensation policies and practices. The BRC approves all individual compensation and profit share recommendations for executive directors, including James Hooke, other compensation recommendations made outside of Macquarie’s policy relating to individuals or groups of individuals (unless required to be approved by the Macquarie board), material changes to pension arrangements and changes to compensation policies not requiring full Macquarie board approval.

Responsibility for the determination of individual compensation and profit share recommendations for division directors, including Todd Weintraub, for the 2014 remuneration cycle rests with the Head of the Macquarie Financial Management Group. These recommendations are subject to review by Macquarie’s Remuneration and Promotions Committee, a committee of Macquarie management. The recommendations relating to fixed remuneration changes and profit share allocations are ultimately approved by the BRC in the aggregate.

Based on a review of the analyses and conclusions regarding compensation provided by the BRC in 2014, the non-executive directors of the Macquarie board determined that compensation was appropriate and that it was structured in a way that encouraged the overall objective of driving longer-term shareholder returns of Macquarie by aligning the interest of staff with those of shareholders and by attracting and retaining high-quality staff.

2014 Say-on-Pay Advisory Vote

Approximately 94% of the votes cast approved, on an advisory basis, the executive compensation described in the Company’s proxy statement for such meeting. There were no changes to the structure of the Company’s executive compensation program as a result of the say-on-pay vote.

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Elements of Macquarie’s Compensation Program

Macquarie’s executive compensation program consists of two elements: fixed compensation and annual profit share. We describe each of these below.

Fixed Compensation

Fixed compensation for our named executive officers consists of annual base salary. It also includes the following additional benefits that Macquarie believes are customarily provided by employers in the United States: life insurance, accidental death, disability and dismemberment (AD&D) insurance, long-term and short-term disability insurance, medical, dental and vision coverage and matching employer contributions under Macquarie’s 401(k) retirement plan.

Annual base salary takes into consideration the role of the individual and market conditions. However, fundamental to Macquarie’s compensation philosophy is the principle that a significant amount of the compensation be at risk and dependent upon performance. Mr. Hooke’s annual base salary remained at $400,000 and Mr. Weintraub’s salary remained at $350,000.

Annual Profit Share

Macquarie has profit share arrangements for staff, including Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub, to encourage superior performance. Each year, the size of the profit share pool is determined by reference to Macquarie’s net profit after tax and excess return over the cost of capital for the period from April 1st of the prior year to March 31st of the year in which the profit share is determined. The proportion of after tax profit and the proportion of earnings in excess of Macquarie’s cost of capital that are incorporated in the profit share calculation are reviewed at least annually. The profit share pool is allocated to business groups based primarily on their relative contributions to profit, taking into account capital usage and risk.

An individual’s profit share allocation is based on performance. For staff with specific fund responsibilities, the performance of the relevant fund is important in determining that individual’s profit share allocation, including the underlying factors influencing fund performance such as management and leadership, the operational performance of the underlying assets and effective capital management. The effect of this profit sharing is to provide substantial incentives in relation to superior performance, but low or no participation for less satisfactory performance. Superior performance looks at a range of indicators that go beyond financial performance, including leadership and upholding Macquarie’s principles. For senior executives, this means that a large part of their remuneration each year is performance-based and “at risk,” providing significant alignment of their interests with those of Macquarie shareholders and, through the fee incentives in our management services agreement, our shareholders.

Our named executive officers participate in the profit share pool. The profit share pool allows Macquarie to reward all staff who have contributed to the growth of Macquarie-managed entities. The profit share pool also creates incentives for, and encourages long-term commitment among, executives working in the interests of Macquarie-managed entities that may experience some short-term market underperformance or other short-term declines in profitability due to macroeconomic factors or other extraordinary circumstances, even though the underlying assets may be performing well.

The level of profit share received by our named executive officers is based predominantly on their individual contribution to the performance of our Company, taking into account the following elements:

operational performance of our underlying businesses;
management and leadership of our Company and the businesses under the control of our Company;
acquisitions and the subsequent management of those businesses to ensure performance is in line with the acquisition business plans;
effective capital management; and
factors relating to enhancing Macquarie’s and the Company’s reputation and track record.

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There is no formulaic approach to determining our named executive officers’ share of the profit share pool. It is completely discretionary and is determined based upon the recommendation of the head of the Macquarie Asset Management in the case of Mr. Hooke and the head of the Macquarie Financial Management Group in the case of Mr. Weintraub, taking into account the factors outlined above as well as input from the Company’s directors regarding the performance of our named executive officers. Our named executive officers’ profit share is determined with respect to Macquarie’s fiscal years ended March 31 st of each year and therefore does not reflect subsequent events or our performance for the remainder of each calendar year.

Mr. Hooke’s profit share in 2014 for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2014 was $3,750,000, of which $2,249,999 was paid in cash and $1,500,001 was retained and delivered. Of the $1,500,001 that was retained and delivered, $750,001 was notionally invested in the Directors’ Profit Share Plan (“DPS Plan”) in cash and $750,000 was delivered in the form of Macquarie Group shares through the Macquarie Group Employee Retained Equity Plan (“MEREP”). As described below in “Macquarie Capital Group Limited Loan,” the $750,001 notionally invested in the DPS Plan was effectively used to cash-collateralize a loan to Mr. Hooke to enable him to purchase shares of MIC.

The specific factors considered in determining Mr. Hooke’s profit share included the performance during the period of our shares compared with the Company’s utilities index benchmark, the growth in available cash generated by our underlying businesses, his effectiveness at managing and leading our Company and our underlying businesses, two successful equity offerings that resulted in the refinancing of debt and reduction in leverage ratios and the acquisition of an FBO chain by Atlantic Aviation and his role as director of the Company’s operating entities. In addition, the increase in profit share reflected the increase in shareholder dividends and the growth of the Contracted Power and Energy segment of our Company. Profit share awards also took into account Mr. Hooke’s role in maintaining and growing the reputation and brand awareness of the Company and Macquarie Group as a leader in the ownership and management of infrastructure businesses.

Mr. Weintraub’s profit share in 2014 for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2014 was $400,000, of which $289,687 was paid in cash and $110,313 was retained and delivered in the form of Macquarie Group shares through the MEREP. The specific factors considered in determining Mr. Weintraub’s profit share for 2014 included his leadership of the finance function of our Company, including his management and coordination of internal controls over financial processes and management of the internal and external audit function, his development and leadership of our finance team and the finance teams of our operating businesses, the coordination and management of compliance with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission’s requirements for financial reporting, as well as his stewardship of the Company’s accounting function, including staff management, identification and resolution of accounting issues and implementation of and compliance with new accounting standards. In addition, Mr. Weintraub’s profit share award reflected his leadership and involvement in two successful equity offerings that resulted in the refinancing of debt and reduction in leverage ratios and the acquisition of an FBO chain by Atlantic Aviation, his role as director of the Company’s operating entities, the increase in shareholder dividends and the growth and integration of the Contracted Power and Energy segment of our Company.

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Retained Portion of Profit Share

Deferral and restriction arrangements apply to a portion of allocated profit share to encourage a long-term perspective and commitment from Macquarie employees, including our named executive officers. It also encourages alignment with the longer-term interest of shareholders.

The table below sets out a summary of the current arrangements. The rules for executive and division directors apply to Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub’s profit share allocations, respectively, for Macquarie’s fiscal year ended March 31, 2014.

     
Key Area   Executive Directors   Division Directors     
Amount of profit
share retained
  40% – 70%   AUD $0 – AUD $50,000
AUD $50,001 – AUD $200,000
AUD $200,001 – AUD $500,000
Above AUD $500,000
  Nil
25%
35%
40%
How retained profit share is invested  

•  

Invested in a combination of Macquarie shares (MEREP) and the DPS Plan

 

•  

Invested in Macquarie shares (MEREP) and the Notional Investment Plan (NI Plan) for selected groups of staff whose primary role relates to the management of the funds business

    
    

•  

Investment mix will vary depending on individual’s role

 

•  

Investment mix will vary depending on individual’s role

    
Vesting and release of retained profit share   All retained amounts vest and are released from three to five years after the year retained (see also forfeiture below)   Vesting and release two to four years after the year retained     
Forfeiture of retained profit share on leaving  

•  

Unvested amounts forfeited, except for limited circumstances

  Unvested amounts forfeited, except for limited circumstances
    

•  

Vested amounts forfeited in stages if a “disqualifying event” occurs within two years of leaving

    
Minimum Shareholding Requirement   Required to hold the deemed
after-tax equivalent of 10% of all profit share allocations over the last five years in Macquarie shares (which is satisfied by the above requirements)
  Not applicable     

Retained profit share is held for executive directors in both the DPS Plan and the MEREP. For division directors, retained profit share is generally held in the MEREP, however a portion is also held in the NI Plan for division directors whose role relates to the management of the funds business. The features of these plans and details of 2014 retention for Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub under each plan are outlined below.

The Directors’ Profit Share (“DPS”) Plan

The DPS Plan comprises exposure to a notional portfolio of Macquarie-managed funds. These retained amounts for executive directors are notionally invested over the retention period. This investment is described as “notional” because executive directors do not directly hold securities in relation to this investment. However, the value of the retained amounts will vary as if these amounts were directly invested in actual securities, giving the executive directors an effective exposure to the performance of the securities. For Mr. Hooke, effective April 1, 2013, the retained amounts in the DPS Plan that were previously notionally invested in Macquarie managed funds were converted to a notional investment in cash within the DPS Plan.

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As an executive director, $750,001 of Mr. Hooke’s 2014 retention was notionally invested in the DPS Plan, also in cash. As described below in “Macquarie Capital Group Limited Loan,” the $750,001 notionally invested in the DPS Plan was used to effectively cash-collateralize a loan to Mr. Hooke to enable him to purchase shares of MIC.

The Notional Investment Plan (“NI Plan”)

The NI Plan applies to staff other than executive directors, and similar to the DPS Plan comprises exposure to a notional portfolio of Macquarie-managed funds. These retained amounts for division directors are notionally invested over the retention period. This investment is described as “notional” because division directors do not directly hold securities in relation to this investment. However, the value of the retained amounts will vary as if these amounts were directly invested in actual securities, giving the staff an effective exposure to the performance of the securities. As a division director, part of Mr. Weintraub’s 2013 retention was notionally invested in cash within the NI Plan for the first time. Mr. Weintraub did not participate in the NI Plan in 2014.

The Macquarie Group Employee Retained Equity Plan (“MEREP”)

The role of the MEREP is to deliver remuneration in the form of Macquarie Group Limited equity (ASX:MQG). Equity awards through the MEREP, in the U.S., will generally be in the form of units comprising a beneficial interest in restricted Macquarie shares held in a trust for staff members (referred to as “restricted share units”). The participant is entitled to receive dividends on the restricted share units and direct the Trustee how to exercise voting rights on the shares.

As noted above, profit share retention arrangements via the MEREP apply to (up to and including 2014), executive and division directors, including Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub, respectively. Of the 2014, 2013 and 2012 profit share for Mr. Hooke, $750,000, $680,762 and $316,890 was retained and invested in Macquarie shares through the MEREP, respectively. Of the 2014, 2013 and 2012 profit share for Mr. Weintraub, $110,313, $69,932 and $79,420 was retained and invested in Macquarie shares through the MEREP, respectively. The reasons for the change from 2013 to 2014 for Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub are discussed under “Elements of Macquarie’s Compensation Program-Fixed Compensation and Annual Profit Share” above. These equity awards through the MEREP will vest and be released on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st following the second, third and fourth anniversary of the initial profit share allocation for Mr. Weintraub and for Mr. Hooke’s profit share earned before 2011. Mr. Hooke’s profit share earned from 2011 will vest and be released on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st following the third, fourth and fifth anniversary of the initial profit share allocation.

Macquarie Capital Group Limited Loan

To facilitate Mr. Hooke’s alignment of interest with other MIC shareholders, on March 28, 2013, Macquarie Capital Group Limited, an Australian entity, provided Mr. Hooke a secured loan of AUD $650,000 with an initial interest rate of 3.0% to be used to purchase MIC shares. The interest on the loan is reset quarterly. On the same date, Mr. Hooke purchased 13,327 MIC shares from our Manager using the proceeds from this loan. On May 8, 2013, Mr. Hooke drew down an additional AUD $196,352 with an initial interest rate of 2.77%. Using the proceeds from this drawdown, on the same day, Mr. Hooke purchased an additional 3,419 MIC shares from the open market. On July 14, 2014, Mr. Hooke drew down an additional AUD $200,293 with an initial interest rate of 2.65%. Using the proceeds from this drawdown, on July 17, 2014, Mr. Hooke purchased an additional 2,830 MIC shares from the open market. On March 2, 2015, Mr. Hooke drew down an additional AUD $412,265 with an initial interest rate of 2.11%. Using the proceeds from this drawdown, on the same day, Mr. Hooke purchased an additional 4,000 MIC shares from the open market.

To facilitate Mr. Weintraub’s alignment of interest with other MIC shareholders, on August 30, 2013, Macquarie Capital Group Limited provided Mr. Weintraub a secured loan of AUD $100,000 with an initial interest rate of 2.58% to be used to purchase MIC shares. The interest on the loan is reset quarterly. On the same date, Mr. Weintraub purchased 1,534 MIC shares from the open market using the proceeds from this loan. On March 27, 2014 and August 12, 2014, Mr. Weintraub made repayments of AUD $1,296 and AUD $2,155, respectively.

The interest rate on these loans was 2.59% at March 31, 2015.

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Post-Termination Compensation and Benefits

On May 24, 2010, Macquarie Capital Group Limited entered into an employment agreement with Mr. Hooke. The employment agreement provides that he holds the position of executive director. Mr. Hooke is assigned to Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. and is currently seconded to Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC as chief executive officer. On May 26, 2010, Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. entered into an employment agreement with Mr. Weintraub. The employment agreement provides that he holds the position of division director. Mr. Weintraub is assigned to Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. and currently seconded to Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC as chief financial officer. See “Executive Compensation — Employment Agreements” below for further discussions.

The employment agreements with our current named executive officers are ongoing and provide for termination of employment by Macquarie or the executive after giving four weeks’ notice for Mr. Hooke and two weeks’ notice for Mr. Weintraub. Macquarie sponsors a severance plan for U.S.-based staff that it believes is comparable to plans typically offered by U.S. employers. The MEREP, DPS Plan, NI Plan and the Macquarie’s profit share arrangements also have specific provisions relating to termination events as described under “Executive Compensation — Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control” below.

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COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

Our compensation committee is composed of five independent directors. In addition, all members of the compensation committee are “outside directors” for purposes of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended, and “non-employee directors” within the meaning of Section 16 of the Exchange Act. The responsibilities of the compensation committee include reviewing the Manager’s performance of its obligations under the management services agreement, reviewing the remuneration of the Manager, determining the compensation of the independent directors, granting rights to indemnification and reimbursement of expenses to the Manager and any seconded individuals and making recommendations to the board regarding the Company’s equity-based and incentive compensation plans, policies and programs. The compensation committee operates under a written charter adopted by the board, reflecting the NYSE rules for compensation committees in light of the Company’s external management structure. A copy of the charter is available on the Company’s website at www.macquarie.com/mic under “Investor Center/Governance.”

As described in the section “Director Compensation Fiscal Year 2014” in this proxy statement, our directors receive an annual cash retainer for serving on the board, fees for each committee meeting which they attend and an annual cash retainer for each committee they chair. In addition, independent directors are compensated with director share units that are granted under our independent directors’ equity plan and receive reimbursement for certain reasonable expenses related to their service as directors.

The compensation committee does not establish or review compensation policies with respect to our chief executive officer or chief financial officer since such individuals are employed by an affiliate of the Manager, and are seconded to the Company.

This report on executive compensation for 2014 is provided by the undersigned members of the compensation committee of the board.

The compensation committee has reviewed and discussed the Compensation Discussion and Analysis with the Company’s management. Since the Company’s named executive officers are not employed or compensated by the Company, the Compensation Discussion and Analysis reflects a discussion of the compensation elements and objectives of the Macquarie Group rather than the Company. Based on this review and discussion, the compensation committee has recommended to the board, and the board has approved, the inclusion of the Compensation Discussion and Analysis in this Proxy Statement and its incorporation by reference into the Company’s annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2014.

Members of the Compensation Committee
  
William H. Webb, Chairman
Norman H. Brown, Jr.
George W. Carmany, III
H.E. (Jack) Lentz
Ouma Sananikone

The information contained in the report above shall not be deemed to be “soliciting material” or to be “filed” with the SEC, nor shall such information be incorporated by reference into any future filing under the Exchange Act or the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Securities Act, except to the extent that we specifically incorporate it by reference in such filing.

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EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Summary Compensation Table

The following table sets forth the compensation earned by our named executive officers during our fiscal years ended December 31, 2014, 2013 and 2012.

           
Name & Principal Position   Year   Salary
($)(1)
  Bonus
($)(2)
  Stock Awards
($)(3)
  All Other Compensation
($)(4)
  Total
($)
James Hooke – Chief Executive Officer     2014       400,000       3,000,000       673,736       241,011       4,314,747  
    2013       400,000       2,723,048       536,747       73,777       3,733,572  
    2012       400,000       1,267,561       308,626       41,790       2,017,977  
Todd Weintraub – Chief Financial Officer     2014       350,000       289,687       99,069       52,123       790,879  
    2013       337,500       426,775       55,126       25,447       844,848  
    2012       325,000       245,580       77,330       19,948       667,858  

(1) Salary amounts reflect salary earned from the period of January 1st to December 31st of each year.
(2) Amounts represent profit share earned during the Macquarie Group’s fiscal years ended March 31, 2014, 2013 and 2012 and therefore reflect performance metrics and incentives through those dates and do not reflect subsequent performance. Bonus amounts for 2014, 2013 and 2012 reflect the cash portion of profit share allocations and, for Mr. Hooke, bonus amounts for 2014, 2013 and 2012 include $750,001, $680,762 and $316,891, respectively, that was notionally invested in the DPS Plan in cash, and which effectively cash-collateralizes a loan to Mr. Hooke to acquire shares of MIC. For Mr. Weintraub, the bonus amount for 2013 included $69,933 that was notionally invested in the NI Plan. Bonus amounts for 2014, 2013 and 2012 do not include a portion of profit share that was retained and subsequently delivered in the form of Macquarie restricted share units through the MEREP.
(3) Represents the grant date fair value of restricted share unit awards pursuant to the MEREP, computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, based on the closing price of Macquarie Group Limited shares (ASX:MQG) on the date of grant. The 2014, 2013 and 2012 MEREP awards were granted on June 25, 2014, June 25, 2013 and June 7, 2012, respectively, at a closing price of Macquarie Group Limited shares of AUD $59.80, AUD $40.22 and AUD $26.70, respectively. The 2014, 2013 and 2012 grant date value have been converted from Australian dollars to U.S. dollars using the Federal Reserve Bank noon buying rate effective on December 31, 2014 of $0.8173 to AUD $1.00, December 31, 2013 of $0.8929 to AUD $1.00 and December 31, 2012 of $1.0392 to AUD $1.00.

For Mr. Hooke, $750,000, $680,762 and $316,890 of his profit share was retained and invested in Macquarie restricted share units through the MEREP for 2014, 2013 and 2012, respectively. This equated to 13,785, 14,946 and 11,123 restricted share units for 2014, 2013 and 2012, respectively, with a grant date fair value of $673,736, $536,747 and $308,626, respectively.

For Mr. Weintraub, $110,313, $69,932 and $79,420 of his profit share was retained and invested in Macquarie restricted share units through the MEREP for 2014, 2013 and 2012, respectively. This equated to 2,027, 1,535 and 2,787 restricted share units for 2014, 2013 and 2012, respectively, with a grant date fair value of $99,069, $55,126 and $77,330, respectively.

These amounts represent profit share earned during the Macquarie fiscal years ended March 31, 2014, 2013 and 2012 and therefore reflect performance metrics and incentives through those dates and do not reflect subsequent performance. For further discussions on retained profit share and MEREP awards, see “Grants of Macquarie Restricted Share Units” below.

(4) All other compensation represents dividends and distributions paid on the MEREP awards and the total value of employer-provided 401(k) contributions for the years ended December 31, 2014, 2013 and 2012. For 2014, 2013 and 2012, Mr. Hooke received ordinary dividends on Macquarie restricted shares through the MEREP of $100,158, $63,577 and $31,790, respectively. For 2014, 2013 and 2012, Mr. Weintraub received ordinary dividends on Macquarie restricted share units through the MEREP of $16,795, $15,247 and $9,948, respectively. During 2014, Messrs. Hooke and Weintraub, as MEREP participants, also received distributions of $130,453 and $24,928, respectively. These amounts represent the proceeds of the sale of certain securities that were distributed to all Macquarie Group shareholders. Messrs. Hooke and Weintraub each received $10,400, $10,200 and $10,000 of employer-provided 401(k) contributions during 2014, 2013 and 2012, respectively.

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Grants of Plan Based Awards in Fiscal Year 2014

The following table presents information on plan-based awards granted in fiscal year 2014 to the named executive officers in the Summary Compensation Table.

       
Name   Grant Date   Approval
Date
  All Other Stock
Awards: Number of
Shares of Stock or
Units (#)
  Grant Date Fair
Value of Stock
Awards
($)(1)
James Hooke     Jun. 25, 2014       May 1, 2014       13,785       673,736  
Todd Weintraub     Jun. 25, 2014       May 1, 2014       2,027       99,069  

(1) Amounts reflect 2014 profit share retained and granted in 2014 as MEREP awards in the form of restricted share units (converted from Australian dollars to U.S. dollars using the Federal Reserve Bank noon buying rate effective on December 31, 2014 of 0.8173 to AUD $1.00).

Grants of Macquarie Restricted Share Units

As discussed above, for fiscal years 2014, 2013 and 2012, amounts shown in the Summary Compensation Table include a portion of profit share that was retained and was subsequently delivered in the form of Macquarie restricted share units through the MEREP. Restricted share units representing the 2014, 2013 and 2012 retained profit share were granted on June 25, 2014, June 25, 2013 and June 7, 2012, respectively, for our named executive officers at a closing price per Macquarie share of AUD $59.80, AUD $40.22 and AUD $26.70, respectively. Upon vesting (as described below), the holding restriction will be removed and the employee will be able to withdraw these share units.

For Mr. Hooke, $750,000, $680,762 and $316,890 was retained in 2014, 2013 and 2012, respectively, and converted into Macquarie restricted share units through the MEREP. For 2014, this equated to 13,785 restricted share units awarded under the MEREP calculated using the average purchase price of MEREP awards purchased over the period from May 14, 2014 up to and including June 25, 2014 of AUD $59.56. These restricted share units vest, in accordance with the executive director vesting schedule, in three equal installments on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st of each year from 2017 to 2019. For 2013, this equated to 14,946 restricted share units awarded under the MEREP calculated using the average purchase price of MEREP awards purchased over the period from May 13, 2013 up to and including June 25, 2013 of AUD $43.56. These restricted share units vest in three equal installments on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st of each year from 2016 to 2018. For 2012, this equated to 11,123 restricted share units awarded under the MEREP calculated using the average purchase price of MEREP awards purchased over the period from May 7, 2012 up to and including June 7, 2012 of AUD $26.97. These restricted share units vest in three equal installments on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st of each year from 2015 to 2017.

For Mr. Weintraub, $110,313, $69,932 and $79,420 was retained in 2014, 2013 and 2012, respectively, and converted into Macquarie restricted share units through the MEREP. For 2014, this equated to 2,027 restricted share units awarded under the MEREP calculated using the average purchase price of MEREP awards purchased over the period from May 14, 2014 up to and including June 25, 2014 of AUD $59.56. These restricted share units vest, in accordance with the division director vesting schedule, in three equal installments on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st of each year from 2016 to 2018. For 2013, this equated to 1,535 restricted share units awarded under the MEREP calculated using the average purchase price of MEREP awards purchased over the period from May 13, 2013 up to and including June 25, 2013 of AUD $43.56. These restricted share units vest in three equal installments on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st of each year from 2015 to 2017. For 2012, this equated to 2,787 restricted share units awarded under the MEREP calculated using the average purchase price of MEREP awards purchased over the period from May 7, 2012 up to and including June 7, 2012 of AUD $26.97. These restricted share units vest in three equal installments on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st of each year from 2014 to 2016.

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Retained Cash Portion of Profit Share

See “Nonqualified Deferred Compensation in Fiscal Year 2014” below for further information regarding the retained cash portion of the profit share for both Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub as of December 31, 2014.

Employment Agreements

Employment Agreement with James Hooke. Our chief executive officer has an evergreen employment agreement with Macquarie Capital Group Limited dated May 24, 2010, and is assigned to Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. and is currently seconded to Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC. The agreement provides that he holds the position of executive director within Macquarie Group. Mr. Hooke’s annual base salary remained at $400,000 in 2014. The agreement also provides that Mr. Hooke is eligible to participate in Macquarie’s profit share arrangements, Macquarie’s 401(k) plan, and health and welfare plans, and will be eligible for a four-week vacation and sick and personal time as provided to other employees at his level. Mr. Hooke is also entitled to accrue long service leave, a benefit provided under the Australian regulatory regime providing for additional vacation based on length of service. In addition, Mr. Hooke is eligible to be reimbursed for reasonable and necessary out-of-pocket expenses incurred by him in connection with the performance of his duties and in accordance with Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc.’s expense policy.

Employment Agreement with Todd Weintraub. Our chief financial officer has an evergreen employment agreement with Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc., dated May 26, 2010 and is currently seconded to Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC. The agreement provides that he holds the position of division director with Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. Mr. Weintraub’s annual base salary remained at $350,000 in 2014. The agreement also provides that Mr. Weintraub is eligible to participate in Macquarie’s profit share arrangements, Macquarie’s 401(k) plan, and health and welfare plans, and will be eligible for a four-week vacation and holidays, sick and personal time as provided to other employees at his level. In addition, Mr. Weintraub is eligible to be reimbursed for reasonable and necessary out-of-pocket expenses incurred by him in connection with the performance of his duties and in accordance with Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc.’s expense policy.

See “Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control” for further information regarding these employment agreements.

Outstanding Equity Awards at 2014 Fiscal Year-End

The following table sets forth a summary of all outstanding equity awards, consisting of Macquarie Group Limited shares, held by each of our named executive officers as of December 31, 2014.

In February 2014, Messrs. Hooke and Weintraub, as MEREP participants, received distributions of $130,453 and $24,928, respectively. These amounts represent the proceeds of the sale of certain securities that were distributed to all Macquarie Group shareholders. As part of this transaction, Macquarie Group shareholders approved a reduction of capital through a conversion of one Macquarie Group ordinary share into 0.9438 Macquarie Group ordinary shares. The number of Macquarie Group ordinary shares presented below reflects such adjustment with respect to outstanding shares under the MEREP.

     
    Stock Awards
Name   Grant Date   Number of Shares or
Units of Stock That
Have Not Vested
(#)(1)
  Market Value of Shares
or Units of Stock That
Have Not Vested at
December 31, 2014
($)(2)
James Hooke     Jun. 20, 2011       5,646       268,978  
    Jun. 7, 2012       10,498       500,129  
    Jun. 25, 2013       14,105       671,968  
    Jun. 25, 2014       13,785       656,723  
Todd Weintraub     Jun. 20, 2011       1,008       48,002  
    Jun. 7, 2012       1,754       83,561  
    Jun. 25, 2013       1,448       68,983  
    Jun. 25, 2014       2,027       96,567  

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(1) The restricted share units that relate to the profit share vest on the first staff trading window after July 1st on the second, third and fourth anniversaries of the date of the initial profit share allocation for Mr. Weintraub and on the third, fourth and fifth anniversaries of the date of the initial profit share allocations for Mr. Hooke. The restricted share units granted on June 7, 2012 relate to the 2012 profit share and vest in three equal installments on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st of 2014, 2015 and 2016 for Mr. Weintraub and after July 1st of 2015, 2016 and 2017 for Mr. Hooke. The restricted share units granted on June 25, 2013 relate to the 2013 profit share and vest in three equal installments on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st of 2015, 2016 and 2017 for Mr. Weintraub and after July 1st of 2016, 2017 and 2018 for Mr. Hooke. The restricted share units granted on June 25, 2014 relate to the 2014 profit share and vest in three equal installments on the first day of the first staff trading window after July 1st of 2016, 2017 and 2018 for Mr. Weintraub and after July 1st of 2017, 2018 and 2019 for Mr. Hooke.
(2) Market values of unvested restricted share units are based on a closing price of Macquarie Group Limited (ASX:MQG) of AUD $58.29 on December 31, 2014. Market values of unvested restricted share units have been converted from Australian dollars to U.S. dollars using the Federal Reserve Bank noon buying rate effective on December 31, 2014 of $0.8173 to AUD $1.00.

In 2014, Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub received ordinary dividends on Macquarie shares through the MEREP of AUD $1.60 (Final Dividend) for shares held on the Record Date of May 16, 2014 and AUD $1.30 (Interim Dividend) for shares held on the Record Date of November 14, 2014. This equated to $100,158 and $16,795 for Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub, respectively. Messrs. Hooke and Weintraub, as MEREP participants, also received distributions of $130,453 and $24,928, respectively. These amounts represent the proceeds of the sale of certain securities that were distributed to all Macquarie Group shareholders.

Stock Vested in Fiscal Year 2014

The following table sets forth a summary of MEREP stock awards that vested in 2014 for Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub.

   
  Stock Awards
Name   Number of
Shares Acquired
on Vesting
(#)
  Value Realized
on Vesting
($)(1)
James Hooke     5,644       263,762  
Todd Weintraub     1,885       88,092  

(1) On the vesting date, the share price of MEREP awards was AUD $57.18. The value of stock vested in the above table has been converted from Australian dollars to U.S. dollars using the Federal Reserve Bank noon buying rate effective on December 31, 2014 of $0.8173 to AUD $1.00.

Nonqualified Deferred Compensation in Fiscal Year 2014

The following table sets forth a summary of the profit share retained under the DPS Plan for Mr. Hooke and the NI Plan for Mr. Weintraub as of December 31, 2014.

         
Name   Plan   Registrant
Contributions
in Last FY
($)(1)
  Aggregate
Earnings in
Last FY
($)(2)
  Aggregate
Withdrawals/
Distributions
($)
  Aggregate
Balance at
Last FYE
($)(3)
James Hooke     DPS Plan       750,001       34,771       120,957       1,610,005  
Todd Weintraub     NI Plan             1,462             54,663  

(1) Consists of the portion of the amount reported in the bonus column of the Summary Compensation Table for the 2014 fiscal year that is deferred under the DPS Plan for Mr. Hooke and under the NI Plan for Mr. Weintraub.

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(2) With respect to the DPS Plan and NI Plan, amount represents notional earnings (losses) from January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2014 and the foreign exchange adjustment at December 31, 2014. The amounts have been converted from Australian dollars to U.S. dollars using the Federal Reserve Bank noon buying rate effective on December 31, 2014 of $0.8173 to AUD $1.00.
(3) With respect to the DPS Plan and NI Plan, the amount has been converted from Australian dollars to U.S. dollars using the Federal Reserve Bank noon buying rate effective on December 31, 2014 of $0.8173 to AUD $1.00.

The compensation reported in the nonqualified deferred compensation table was deferred by Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub pursuant to Macquarie’s profit share arrangements. Under the DPS Plan and the NI Plan, the value of the retained profit share for the period from the preceding July 1st to June 30th is determined based on total shareholder returns of the notional portfolio of Macquarie-managed funds selected by Macquarie assuming reinvestment of distributions and, therefore, takes into account both capital appreciation and distributions to shareholders. Notional earnings (losses) for the July 1 st to June 30th period are measured quarterly. The participant has no input into decisions regarding the notional portfolio selected. Any increases in value of the notional portfolio may be paid out in August each year at the discretion of Macquarie’s Executive Committee, or the BRC. If the notional investment of the amount retained under the DPS Plan and/or the NI Plan results in a notional loss, Macquarie will not make any payment or compensation in respect of the loss. This notional loss will be offset against notional income in the first instance and then against any future notional income until the loss is completely offset. Any notional loss may also be deducted from amounts retained under the DPS Plan and NI Plan at the discretion of the Macquarie Executive Committee or the BRC.

Profit share retained under the DPS Plan vests and is paid out in three equal installments: three, four and five years from the retention date. Profit share retained under the NI Plan vests and is paid out in three equal installments: two, three and four years from the retention date.

Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control

For each of the named executive officers, there are no contracts, agreements, plans or arrangements that provide for payments upon a change of control of our Company.

Termination Provisions Under Employment Agreements

Under the terms of Mr. Hooke’s employment agreement with MGL, dated May 24, 2010, Mr. Hooke will provide Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. four weeks’ notice if he voluntarily resigns. Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. will provide Mr. Hooke four weeks’ notice of any termination (although the employer may make payments to him in lieu of such notice), subject to certain exclusions including misconduct, dishonesty, harm to reputation of the employer or Macquarie, inappropriate workplace behavior, inability to comply with conditions of employment and/or any other reason justifying termination without notice. The period between such notice and termination of employment is referred to as the “notice period.” During the notice period, Mr. Hooke will be entitled to continue to receive his salary and contributions to the group medical, dental, vision, life and disability plans. Upon termination, Mr. Hooke will be entitled to payment of any accrued but unpaid vacation time. During the notice period, Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. has the discretion to direct Mr. Hooke not to do any work or contact any customers or clients for a period up to the date of his termination or resignation. During this notice period, Mr. Hooke will continue to be employed by Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. and must not engage or prepare to engage in any business activity that is the same or similar to the business he was undertaking with his employer. Mr. Hooke is also entitled to severance under Macquarie’s severance plan discussed below.

Mr. Hooke’s employment agreement also provides that Mr. Hooke is subject to a confidentiality restrictive covenant for an unlimited duration. The employment agreement also provides that Mr. Hooke is subject to a non-solicitation restrictive covenant of employees and clients during his employment and for a six-month period thereafter. In addition, the employment agreement provides that Mr. Hooke is subject to a non-competition restrictive covenant during his employment and for a three-month period thereafter.

Under the terms of Mr. Weintraub’s employment agreement with Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc., dated May 26, 2010, Mr. Weintraub will provide Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. two weeks’ notice if he voluntarily resigns and Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. will provide Mr. Weintraub two weeks’ notice of any termination

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for any reason other than for “cause,” as defined in the agreement. The period between such notice and termination of employment is referred to as the “notice period.” During the notice period, Mr. Weintraub will be entitled to continue to receive his salary and contributions to the group medical, dental, vision, life and disability plans. Upon termination, Mr. Weintraub will be entitled to payment of any accrued but unpaid vacation time. Macquarie may, in its discretion, alter Mr. Weintraub’s duties or place him on paid leave of absence during the notice period. In addition, Mr. Weintraub may not engage in any other business activity during his employment or the notice period. Mr. Weintraub is also entitled to severance under Macquarie’s severance plan discussed below.

The employment agreement provides that Mr. Weintraub is subject to a confidentiality restrictive covenant for an unlimited duration. The employment agreement also provides that Mr. Weintraub is subject to a non-solicitation restrictive covenant of employees and clients during his employment and for a six-month period thereafter. In addition, the employment agreement provides that Mr. Weintraub is subject to a non-competition restrictive covenant during his employment and for a three-month period thereafter.

Macquarie’s Severance Plan

Under Macquarie’s severance plan applicable to U.S.-based staff including Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub, if Mr. Hooke or Mr. Weintraub is terminated by Macquarie for reasons other than for cause or by voluntary resignation, he would be entitled to severance payments equal to four weeks’ base salary for the first year of employment plus three weeks’ base salary for each year thereafter, and pro rata payments for each complete month within any portion of a year.

Profit Share Arrangement

The DPS Plan, the NI Plan and the MEREP rules give Macquarie the discretion to fully vest retention on termination. The BRC or the Executive Committee under delegation from the board may consider exercising this discretion where, for example, a staff member’s employment ends on the grounds of redundancy, disability, serious ill-health or in other limited exceptional circumstances, such as the business efficacy reasons. In all other cases, retention is forfeited on leaving Macquarie.

Payments Upon Resignation or Termination

If, as of December 31, 2014, Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub’s employment had been terminated without cause, they would have been entitled to a severance payment of $175,000 and $200,240, respectively, under the Macquarie severance plan described above, in addition to accrued and unpaid vacation time. They may also receive unvested options and retained profit share amounts, subject to the discretions outlined above. Mr. Hooke and Mr. Weintraub would not be entitled to any severance in the event of death or serious incapacitation. No amounts would have been payable in the event of their resignation or termination for cause, subject to discretions being exercised in relation to their retained profit share amounts.

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SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

The following table sets forth information regarding the beneficial ownership of shares by each person who is known to us to be the beneficial owner of more than five percent of the outstanding shares at April 2, 2015, and each of our directors and named executive officers and our directors and named executive officers as a group as of April 2, 2015, based on 77,412,136 shares issued and outstanding. All holders of shares are entitled to one vote per share on all matters submitted to a vote of holders of shares. The voting rights attached to shares held by our directors, named executive officers or major shareholders do not differ from those that attach to shares held by any other holder. Under Rule 13d-3 of the Exchange Act, “beneficial ownership” includes shares for which the individual, directly or indirectly, has voting power, meaning the power to control voting decisions, or investment power, meaning the power to cause the sale of the shares, whether or not the shares are held for the individual’s benefit.

         
  Amount and Nature of Beneficial Ownership
(Number of Shares)
 
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner   Shares
Representing
Sole Voting or
Investment
Power
  Shares
Representing
Shared Voting
and
Investment
Power
  Right to
Acquire
Shares
Within
60 Days
  Total   Percent of
Shares
Outstanding
5% Beneficial Owners
                                            
Macquarie Infrastructure Management (USA) Inc.(1)     4,879,020       2,450             4,881,470       6.3 % 
Marcato Capital Management LP(2)           3,866,126             3,866,126       5.0 % 
MSDC Management, L.P.(3)           4,104,007             4,104,007       5.3 % 
Directors(4)
                                            
Martin Stanley(5)     4,000       4,879,020             4,883,020       6.3 % 
Norman H. Brown, Jr.     47,433             2,505 (7)      49,938      
George W. Carmany, III     48,037             2,505 (7)      50,542      
H.E. (Jack) Lentz     17,343             2,505 (7)      19,848      
Ouma Sananikone     3,477             2,505 (7)      5,982      
William H. Webb     92,112             2,505 (7)      94,617      
Shemara Wikramanayake(5)(6)           166,347             166,347      
Named Executive Officers(4)
                                            
James Hooke(5)     58,576       4,879,020             4,937,596       6.4 % 
Todd Weintraub     16,366                   16,366      
All Directors and Executive Officers as a Group     287,344       5,045,367       12,525       5,345,236       6.9 % 

* Less than 1%.
(1) The address of our Manager is 125 West 55th Street, New York, NY 10019. Based on a report on Schedule 13D/A filed on November 20, 2014, as updated by subsequent Form 4s filed on December 15, 2014, January 20, 2015, February 17, 2015 and March 13, 2015, respectively, Macquarie Infrastructure Management (USA) Inc. has shared dispositive power with respect to 4,879,020 shares with Macquarie Group Limited. Macquarie Group Limited also holds shared dispositive power with respect to 2,450 shares reflected in the column entitled “Shares Representing Shared Voting and Investment Power.” These shares are held through its subsidiary Macquarie Group Services Australia Pty Limited to hedge potential payments under its DPS Plan and over which Macquarie Group Services Australia Pty Limited has shared dispositive power with Macquarie.
(2) Marcato Capital Management LP has shared voting and dispositive power with respect to 3,866,126 shares with Richard T. McGuire III, of which voting and dispositive power is also shared with respect to 908,403 shares with Marcato, L.P., 67,492 shares with Marcato II, L.P. and 2,890,231 shares with Marcato International Master Fund, Ltd. The address of each holder is c/o Marcato Capital Management LP, One Montgomery Street, Suite 3250, San Francisco, California 94104.

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(3) Based on a report on Schedule 13G/A filed on February 17, 2015, MSDC Management, L.P., the investment manager of MSD Torchlight Partners, L.P., has shared voting and dispositive power with respect to 3,094,964 shares with MSD Torchlight Partners, L.P. and of which voting and dispositive power is also shared with respect to 1,009,043 shares with MSD Energy Partners, L.P. Each of MSD Torchlight Partners, L.P. and MSD Energy Partners, L.P. is the direct owner of the underlying securities. The address of MSDC Management, L.P., MSD Torchlight Partners, L.P. and MSD Energy Partners, L.P. is 645 Fifth Avenue, 21st Floor, New York, New York 10022.
(4) The address of each director and named executive officer is c/o Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC, 125 West 55th Street, New York, New York 10019.
(5) Each of the following persons may be deemed to beneficially own, and share voting and investment power in, the shares held by the Manager, shown separately in the table above:
Ms. Wikramanayake, as the Executive Chairman of the Macquarie Group’s Macquarie Asset Management group, of which the Manager constitutes a part.
Mr. Stanley, as Chairman of the Macquarie Group’s Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets division, of which the Manager constitutes a part.
Mr. Hooke, as the president and a director of the Manager.

Each of the foregoing disclaims beneficial ownership and the filing of this proxy statement shall not be construed as an admission that such person is, for the purposes of Section 13(d) or 13(g) of the Exchange Act, the beneficial owner of any of the shares owned by the Manager.

(6) Ms. Wikramanayake currently holds the position of alternate chairman of MIC LLC and is not a director of MIC LLC. Ms. Wikramanayake has shared voting and dispositive power with respect to 166,347 shares with her spouse. These shares are held in a family trust.
(7) Consists of shares which the independent directors have a right, as of May 19, 2015, to acquire through the Independent Directors’ Equity Plan.

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AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

Our audit committee is composed of five independent directors, all of whom are financially literate. In addition, the board has determined that each of Mr. Brown, an independent director and the chairman of the audit committee, and Mr. Carmany, an independent director, qualify as audit committee financial experts as defined by the SEC. The audit committee operates under a written charter, which reflects NYSE listing standards and Sarbanes-Oxley Act requirements regarding audit committees. A copy of the charter is available on the Company’s website at www.macquarie.com/mic under “Investor Center/Governance.”

The audit committee’s primary role is to assist the board in fulfilling its responsibility for oversight of (1) the quality and integrity of the consolidated financial statements and related disclosures, (2) compliance with legal and regulatory requirements, (3) the independent auditors’ qualifications, independence and performance and (4) the performance of our internal audit and control functions.

Management is responsible for the preparation of the financial statements, the financial reporting process and the system of internal controls. The independent auditors are responsible for performing an audit of the financial statements in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, and issuing an opinion as to the conformity of those audited financial statements to U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. The audit committee monitors and oversees these processes.

The audit committee has adopted a policy designed to ensure proper oversight of our independent auditor. Under the policy, the audit committee is directly responsible for the appointment, compensation, retention and oversight of the work of any registered public accounting firm engaged for the purpose of preparing or issuing an audit report or performing any other audit review (including resolution of disagreements among management, the Manager, and the auditor regarding financial reporting), or attestation services. In addition, the audit committee is responsible for pre-approving any non-audit services provided by the Company’s independent auditors. The audit committee’s charter also ensures that the independent auditor discusses with the audit committee important issues such as internal controls, critical accounting policies, any instances of fraud and the consistency and appropriateness of our accounting policies and practices.

The audit committee has reviewed and discussed with management and KPMG LLP, the independent auditor, the audited financial statements as of and for the year ended December 31, 2014. The audit committee has also discussed with KPMG LLP the matters required to be discussed by the Statement on Auditing Standards No. 16 (Communications with Audit Committees) adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB). In addition, the audit committee has received from the independent auditor the written disclosures and letter required by the applicable requirements of the PCAOB regarding the independent auditors’ communications with the audit committee concerning independence, and the audit committee has discussed with the independent auditor its independence from the Company and management. The audit committee also considered whether the non-audit services provided by KPMG LLP to us during 2014 were compatible with its independence as auditor.

Based on these reviews and discussions, the audit committee has recommended to the board, and the board has approved, the inclusion of the audited financial statements in the Company’s annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2014.

Members of the Audit Committee
 
Norman H. Brown, Jr., Chairman
George W. Carmany, III
H.E. (Jack) Lentz
William H. Webb
Ouma Sananikone

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CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

Related Party Transactions Policies

Our board recognizes that related party transactions present a heightened risk of conflicts of interest and therefore has adopted internal policies and protocols to be followed in connection with related party transactions.

The Company’s audit committee is required to approve all related party transactions, including those involving Macquarie Group entities and vehicles managed by the Macquarie Group, regardless of the dollar amount of the transaction. The protocol applies to all transactions involving the Company or any of its subsidiaries in which a Macquarie Group entity may receive a financial benefit.

In approving related party transactions, the audit committee determines whether each such transaction referred to the committee is on arm’s-length terms or better. The audit committee is authorized to request and review any factual information to enable them to determine whether a related party transaction is on arm’s-length terms. This information may take the form of benchmarks comparing the terms of the proposed transaction to similar transactions involving unrelated parties or external fairness opinions.

Under the guidance of the audit committee, the Company’s chief executive officer and chief financial officer are responsible for managing any benchmarking or review process conducted in accordance with the protocol, in consultation with the Company’s general counsel. The Company’s general counsel is responsible for ensuring overall compliance with the protocol, including ensuring that related party transactions covered by the protocol are referred to the audit committee for approval, and for reporting such transactions at regular meetings of the Company’s board of directors. The Company’s risk and compliance manager is responsible for monitoring compliance with the protocol and educating all Company employees, including those seconded by our Manager, about the protocol.

Our board has also adopted a written policy pursuant to which it has pre-approved certain types of transactions with related parties assuming certain conditions are met. The pre-approval policy permits foreign exchange, interest rate hedge and other routine financial transactions (such as the establishment of bank, brokerage and custodial accounts) for which the terms provided by the related party are equal or more favorable to us than those quoted by unaffiliated counterparties. All pre-approved transactions are included as a standing item in reports to the Company’s board at regular meetings of the board.

Our Relationship With the Macquarie Group

Prior to our initial public offering, we were a member of the Macquarie Group of companies. Macquarie Infrastructure Management (USA) Inc., our Manager, is a part of the Macquarie Group. From time to time, we have entered into, and in the future we may enter into, transactions and relationships involving the Macquarie Group, including those with Macquarie Group Limited, its affiliates, or vehicles managed by the Macquarie Group. As discussed above, our audit committee is required to approve all related party transactions, including those involving the Macquarie Group, except for those pre-approved by our board. Our chairman, alternate chairman and chief executive officer also serve as directors without compensation for affiliates of our Manager within the Macquarie Group.

Contractual Arrangements With Our Manager

Our Manager’s Investment in the Company and Registration Rights

At March 31, 2015 and December 31, 2014, the Manager held 4,879,020 shares and 4,667,105 shares, respectively, of the Company. Pursuant to the terms of the management services agreement, or Management Agreement, the Manager may sell these shares, at any time. Under the Management Agreement, the Manager, at its option, may reinvest performance fees and base management fees in shares of the Company.

We entered into a registration rights agreement with our Manager under which we agreed to file a shelf registration statement under the Securities Act relating to the resale of shares owned by our Manager. In addition, our Manager may also require us to include its shares in future registered offerings that we conduct, subject to cutback at the option of the underwriters of any such offering.

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Since 2013, we had paid our Manager cash dividends on shares held for the following periods:

         
Declared   Period Covered   $ per
Share
  Record Date   Payable Date   Cash Paid to
Manager
(in thousands)
February 17, 2015     Fourth quarter 2014     $ 1.02       March 2, 2015       March 5, 2015     $ 4,905  
October 27, 2014     Third quarter 2014     $ 0.98       November 10, 2014       November 13, 2014     $ 4,438  
July 3, 2014     Second quarter 2014     $ 0.95       August 11, 2014       August 14, 2014     $ 3,402  
April 28, 2014     First quarter 2014     $ 0.9375       May 12, 2014       May 15, 2014     $ 3,180  
February 18, 2014     Fourth quarter 2013     $ 0.9125       March 3, 2014       March 6, 2014     $ 2,945  
October 25, 2013     Third quarter 2013     $ 0.875       November 11, 2013       November 14, 2013     $ 2,442  
July 29, 2013     Second quarter 2013     $ 0.875       August 12, 2013       August 15, 2013     $ 2,744  
April 26, 2013     First quarter 2013     $ 0.6875       May 13, 2013       May 16, 2013     $ 1,872  

Management Services Agreement

Management and Fees.  At the closing of our initial public offering, we entered into a management services agreement, or Management Agreement, pursuant to which our Manager manages the day-to-day operations and oversees the management teams of our operating businesses. In addition, our Manager has the right to appoint the chairman of our board and an alternate, subject to minimum equity ownership, and to assign, or second, to us, two of its employees to serve as chief executive officer and chief financial officer and seconds or makes other personnel available as required. Our Manager’s board appointees do not receive any compensation (other than out-of-pocket expenses) and do not have any special voting rights.

In accordance with the Management Agreement, our Manager is entitled to a base management fee based primarily on our Company’s market capitalization, and potentially a performance fee, based on the performance of our Company’s stock relative to a U.S. utilities index. For the quarter ended March 31, 2015 and year ended December 31, 2014, we incurred base management fees of $16.5 million and $46.6 million, respectively. For the quarter ended March 31, 2015 and year ended December 31, 2014, we incurred performance fees of $148.7 million and $121.5 million, respectively.

The unpaid portion of the base management fees and performance fees, if any, at the end of each reporting period is included in due to manager-related party in the consolidated balance sheets. The following table shows the Manager’s election to reinvest its base management fees and performance fees, if any, in additional shares during 2014:

     
Period   Base
Management Fee
Amount
($ in thousands)
  Performance Fee
Amount
($ in thousands)
  Shares Issued
Fourth quarter 2014   $ 14,192     $       208,122  
Third quarter 2014     13,915       116,586 (1)      947,583  
Second quarter 2014     9,535       4,960       243,329  
First quarter 2014     8,994             164,546  

(1) In October 2014, our Board requested, and our Manager agreed, that $65.0 million of the performance fee be settled in cash using the proceeds from the sale of the district energy business in order to minimize dilution. The remainder of the fee of $51.6 million was reinvested in additional shares of MIC.

Our Manager is not entitled to any other compensation and all costs incurred by our Manager, including compensation of seconded staff, are paid by our Manager out of its base management fee. However, we are responsible for other direct costs including, but not limited to, expenses incurred in the administration or management of our businesses, income taxes, audit and legal fees, acquisitions and dispositions and its compliance with applicable laws and regulations. During the quarter ended March 31, 2015 and year ended December 31, 2014, our Manager charged us $88,000 and $571,000, respectively, for reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses. The unpaid portion of the out-of-pocket expenses at the end of the reporting period is included in due to manager-related party in our consolidated balance sheet.

On September 30, 2013, we entered into a Second Amended and Restated Management Services Agreement (the “Amended Agreement”), among the Company, Macquarie Infrastructure Company Inc. and

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our Manager. The amendments to the agreement revised the payment mechanics related to the base management fee payable by the Company to our Manager, and aligned the share price used to calculate the base management fee with the share price at which our Manager may reinvest the base management fee in shares. Effective October 1, 2013, pursuant to the Amended Agreement, base management fees are calculated and payable monthly rather than quarterly. In addition, our Manager has elected to invest its fees in shares, and can only change this election during an 18-trading day window following the Company’s earnings release. Any change would apply to fees paid thereafter. Accordingly, shareholders would have notice of our Manager’s intent to receive fees in cash rather than reinvest before the change was effective. Performance fees continue to be calculated and, if generated, paid quarterly. No substantive changes to the formulas or methodology used to calculate the amount of the base management or performance fees that may be due to our Manager were made. The Amended Agreement also made certain non-substantive changes to eliminate parties and provisions that are no longer relevant.

Acquisition Opportunities.  Under the terms of the Management Agreement, our Manager has exclusive responsibility for reviewing and making recommendations to the board with respect to acquisition opportunities and dispositions. In the event that an opportunity is not originated by our Manager, our board must seek a recommendation from our Manager prior to making a decision concerning any acquisition or disposition. Our Manager and its affiliates refer to our board of directors any acquisition opportunities in accordance with the U.S. acquisition priorities below that are made available to the Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets division of the Macquarie Group unless our chief executive officer determines that such opportunity does not meet our acquisition criteria adopted by our board of directors. To the extent Macquarie Group entities outside the Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets division develop or become aware of acquisition opportunities, they are not obligated to offer us these opportunities.

Pursuant to our Management Agreement, we have first priority ahead of all current and future entities managed by our Manager or by members of the Macquarie Group within the Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets division in each of the following infrastructure acquisition opportunities that are within the United States:

airport fixed base operations;
airport parking;
district energy; and
“user pays”, contracted and regulated assets (as defined below) that represent an investment of greater than AUD $40.0 million ($30.6 million as of March 31, 2015).

“User pays” assets mean businesses that are transportation-related and derive a majority of their revenues from a per use fee or charge.

Contracted assets mean businesses that derive a majority of their revenues from long-term contracts with other businesses or governments.

Regulated assets mean businesses that are the sole or predominant providers of at least one essential service in their service areas and where the level of revenue earned or charges imposed are regulated by government entities.

We have first priority ahead of all current and future entities managed by our Manager or any Manager affiliate in all investment opportunities originated by a party other than our Manager or any Manager affiliate where such party offers the opportunity exclusively to us and not to any other entity managed by our Manager or any Manager affiliate within the Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets division.

Preferred Financial Advisor.  Affiliates of the Macquarie Group, including Macquarie Capital (USA) Inc., or MCUSA, have preferred provider status in respect of any financial advisory services to be contracted for by us. If we contract with MCUSA for such services, such contracts will be based on market terms and subject to approval by our audit committee. Any fees payable to MCUSA for such financial advisory services are in addition to fees paid under the Management Agreement. The use of MCUSA does not preclude our use of similar services provided by any third party vendors, and we have used other advisors from time to time.

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Other Services from the Macquarie Group

We utilize the resources of the Macquarie Group with respect to a range of advisory, procurement, insurance, hedging, lending and other services. Engagements involving members of the Macquarie Group are reviewed and approved by the Audit Committee of our Board of Directors. Macquarie Group affiliates are engaged on an arm’s length basis and frequently as a member of syndicate of providers whose other members establish the terms of the interaction.

Advisory Services

The Macquarie Group, and wholly-owned subsidiaries within the Macquarie Group, including Macquarie Bank Limited, or MBL, and Macquarie Capital (USA) Inc., or MCUSA, have provided various advisory and other services and incurred expenses in connection with the Company’s equity raising activities, acquisitions and debt structuring for our Company and our businesses. Underwriting fees are recorded in members’ equity as a direct cost of equity offerings. Advisory fees and out-of-pocket expenses relating to acquisitions are expensed as incurred. Debt arranging fees are deferred and amortized over the term of the credit facility.

The district energy business’ credit facility was scheduled to mature in September of 2014. During 2013, we engaged MCUSA to assist in identifying and analyzing various alternatives for paying these obligations prior to maturity and obtaining other credit facilities. In August of 2014, we paid $1.6 million to MCUSA for such services upon closing of the sale of district energy business.

In March of 2015 and July of 2014, we completed underwritten public offerings of 6,109,375 shares and 11,500,000 shares. In both transactions, MCUSA served as a joint book-running manager and an underwriter and received $2.3 million and $3.0 million, respectively, from us for such services.

In July of 2014, we also completed underwritten public offerings of $350.0 million aggregate principal amount of convertible senior notes. MCUSA served as a joint book-running manager and an underwriter and received $1.1 million from us for such services.

On January 22, 2014, Atlantic Aviation, our wholly-owned subsidiary, entered into an incremental $100.0 million term loan facility under the AA Credit Agreement. We engaged MCUSA as Joint Bookrunner and paid $16,000 in fees during January of 2014.

In December of 2013, Atlantic Aviation entered into an equity bridge loan for $70.0 million, of which $35.0 million was provided by MIHI LLC, an entity within the Macquarie Group. We engaged MCUSA as Joint Bookrunner and Joint Lead Arranger. This equity bridge loan was never drawn by the business and subsequently cancelled. During the quarter ended March 31, 2014, Atlantic Aviation incurred and paid $88,000 in commitment fees to MCUSA related to this equity bridge loan.

Long-Term Debt

Atlantic Aviation’s $70.0 million revolving credit facility is provided by various financial institutions, including MBL which provides $15.7 million. At March 31, 2015 and December 31, 2014, the revolving credit facility remained undrawn. For the quarter ended March 31, 2015 and year ended December 31, 2014, Atlantic Aviation incurred $28,000 and $107,000, respectively, in commitment fees related to MBL’s portion of the revolving credit facility.

In July of 2014, we entered into a credit agreement at the holding company that provides a five-year, $250.0 million senior secured first lien revolving credit facility, of which $50.0 million is committed by MIHI LLC. Upon closing, we paid MIHI LLC $250,000 in fees. For the quarter ended March 31, 2015 and year ended December 31, 2014, we incurred $34,000 and $65,000, respectively, in commitment fees related to MIHI LLC’s portion of the revolving credit facility. At March 31, 2015 and December 31, 2014, $35,000 and $36,000, respectively, were included in accounts payable in the consolidated balance sheet for those periods.

Other Transactions

Macquarie, through the Macquarie Insurance Facility (MIF), has an aggregated insurance buying program. By combining the insurance premiums of Macquarie owned and managed funds, MIF has been able to deliver very competitive terms to businesses that participate in the facility. MIF earns a commission from

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the insurers. No payments were made to MIF by us during the quarter ended March 31, 2015 and year ended December 31, 2014. In February of 2015, we renewed our Directors and Officers liability insurance utilizing several of the MIF insurers.

Atlantic Aviation, Hawaii Gas, IMTT and Contracted Power and Energy purchase and renew property and casualty insurance coverage on an ongoing basis from insurance underwriters who then pay commissions to MIF. For the quarter end March 31, 2015 and year ended December 31, 2014, no payments were made directly to MIF for property and casualty insurance.

During the first quarter of 2015, Macquarie Capital Markets Canada Ltd, an indirect subsidiary of Macquarie Group Limited, used Atlantic Aviation’s charter jet business and incurred $18,000 for this service. At March 31, 2015, Altantic Avation recorded this amount in accounts receivable.

In July of 2014, in connection with the acquisition of the remaining interest of IMTT, we purchased insurance from an insurance underwriter who then paid commission to MIF. No payments were made directly to MIF for representations and warranties insurance.

Atlantic Aviation entered into a copiers lease agreement with Macquarie Equipment Finance, or MEF, an indirect subsidiary of Macquarie Group Limited. For the quarter ended March 31, 2015 and year ended December 31, 2014, Atlantic Aviation incurred $2,000 and $23,000, respectively, in lease expense on these copiers. As of the March 31, 2015, the contract with MEF expired and there were no amounts due to MEF.

Hawaii Gas entered into licensing agreements with Utility Service Partners, Inc. and America’s Water Heater Rentals, LLC, both indirect subsidiaries of Macquarie Group Limited, to enable these entities to offer products and services to Hawaii Gas’s customer base. No payments were made under these arrangements during the quarter ended March 31, 2015 and year ended December 31, 2014.

In addition, we and several of our subsidiaries have entered into a licensing agreement with the Macquarie Group related to the use of the Macquarie name and trademark. The Macquarie Group does not charge us any fees for this license.

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SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires our Manager and our directors and officers, and persons who beneficially own more than ten percent of our shares, to file initial reports of ownership and reports of changes in ownership of our shares and our other equity securities with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Based solely on our review of copies of such reports and on written representations from such reporting persons, we believe that in 2014 all such reporting persons filed the required reports on a timely basis, except one late Form 4 filing for each of Messrs. Lentz, Webb, Brown and Carmany and Ms. Sananikone (reporting one transaction each), one late Form 4 filing for Macquarie Infrastructure Management (USA), Inc. (reporting two transactions) and one late Form 3 filing for Ms. Wikramanayake (reporting one transaction).

SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR THE 2016 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

To be considered for inclusion in our proxy statement for the 2016 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, shareholder proposals must be received by the Company no later than December 2, 2015. In order to be included in Company sponsored proxy materials, shareholder proposals will need to comply with the requirements of Rule 14a-8 promulgated under the Exchange Act. If you do not comply with Rule 14a-8, we will not be required to include the proposal in the proxy statement and the proxy card we will mail to shareholders.

Pursuant to the LLC Agreement and applicable SEC rules and regulations, no shareholder proposals (other than proposals included in our proxy statement in accordance with Rule 14a-8) may be presented for action at the 2016 Annual Meeting of Shareholders unless a shareholder has given timely notice of the proposal in writing to the Secretary. To be timely, a shareholder’s notice is required to be delivered to the Secretary not earlier than December 22, 2015 (150 days prior to May 20, 2016, the one year anniversary of the 2015 Annual Meeting) or later than January 21, 2016 (120 days prior to May 20, 2016). The notice must contain the information required by the LLC Agreement. The foregoing provisions of the LLC Agreement do not affect a shareholder’s ability to request inclusion of a proposal in our proxy statement in accordance with Rule 14a-8 and referred to above. A proxy may confer discretionary authority to vote on any proposal at a meeting if we do not receive notice of the proposal within the foregoing time frames. Shareholder proposals should be sent to:

Macquarie Infrastructure Company LLC
125 West 55th Street
New York, New York 10019
United States of America
Attention: General Counsel and Secretary

UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION REPORTS

Copies of this proxy statement and our annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2014, as filed with the SEC, are available to shareholders free of charge on our website at www.macquarie.com/mic under “Investor Center/Reports and Presentations” or by writing to us at 125 West 55th Street, New York, New York 10019, United States of America, Attention: Investor Relations.

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OTHER MATTERS

We know of no other business that will be brought before the 2015 Annual Meeting. If any other matter or any proposal should be properly presented and should properly come before the meeting for action, the persons named in the accompanying proxy will vote upon such proposal at their discretion and in accordance with their best judgment.

By order of the board of directors,

[GRAPHIC MISSING]
Michael Kernan
General Counsel and Secretary

April 2, 2015

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